⚡ Key Takeaways

AI GPUs now draw up to 1,400 watts each, pushing single racks to 140 kW — five to seven times traditional levels. Air cooling cannot keep pace. The data center liquid cooling market is valued at $6.6 billion in 2025 and projected to reach $29.5 billion by 2033, with immersion cooling adoption accelerating as the EU mandates 15% waste heat reuse for new data centers by 2026.

Bottom Line: Factor liquid cooling into every new data center build — air-only designs are already obsolete for AI workloads, and regulatory waste heat mandates will make retrofitting unavoidable.

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🧭 Decision Radar (Algeria Lens)

Relevance for AlgeriaMedium
Algeria’s nascent data center market (6 facilities nationwide) means liquid cooling is not yet an operational concern, but any new builds or expansions must factor in cooling strategy from day one given the country’s hot climate (summer temperatures exceeding 45C in southern regions)
Infrastructure Ready?No
Algeria lacks liquid cooling supply chains, trained technicians, and CDU manufacturing or distribution. Current facilities rely entirely on air cooling. No district heating networks exist to absorb waste heat
Skills Available?No
No local training programs or certifications for liquid cooling operations. Mechanical and HVAC engineering talent exists but requires specialized retraining for data center liquid cooling systems
Action Timeline12-24 months
Algeria’s Ministry of Post, Telecommunications, and Digital Technology should begin incorporating liquid cooling readiness into specifications for any planned data center projects, including the Huawei partnership facilities
Key StakeholdersMinistry of Digital Technology, Algerie Telecom, Mobilis, Djezzy, national cloud initiative planners, university engineering programs, Sonatrach (potential waste heat applications for industrial processes)
Decision TypeStrategic
Understanding liquid cooling is essential for anyone planning Algeria’s digital infrastructure future; building air-only facilities in 2026 locks in technology that will be obsolete for AI workloads within 5 years

Quick Take: Algeria’s hot climate actually makes liquid cooling more relevant, not less — air cooling efficiency drops significantly at high ambient temperatures. Any new data center investment in Algeria should be designed liquid-ready from the start, even if initial deployments use air cooling. The Ministry should study EU waste heat regulations as a model, since Algeria’s industrial zones could benefit from circular heat reuse.

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