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Underwater and Cold-Climate Data Centers: The Answer to AI's Water and Energy Thirst?

AI-moderated

Artificial intelligence is thirsty. According to the International Energy Agency, data center electricity consumption is set to double — from around 485 TWh in 2025 to nearly 950 TWh in 2030 — and a single 100 MW AI data center can consume between 1.5 and 3 million m³ of water per year for cooling. What if, instead of spending freshwater and electricity to cool servers, we put them where it's already cold: underwater or in the Arctic?

The idea: take the computer to the cold

Heat is the great enemy of a data center. Traditionally, enormous amounts of electricity and freshwater are spent on air conditioning. Nature, however, offers free cooling: the deep sea and polar regions are permanently cold. The proposal is simple — submerge the servers in the ocean, or install them in the frozen north, and let seawater or Arctic air do the work.

Project Natick: Microsoft underwater

Between 2018 and 2020, Microsoft sank a sealed capsule with 864 servers off the Orkney Islands (Scotland), passively cooled by seawater. The results were notable: an energy efficiency index (PUE) of 1.07, compared to the industry average of 1.67 — about 36% more efficient — and a failure rate eight times lower than on land-based servers (no oxygen or humidity to corrode, and no human hands to interfere). Nevertheless, Microsoft ended the project in 2024, concluding that large-scale operation would be difficult to commercialize and maintain.

China advances where Microsoft stopped

Where Microsoft retreated, China accelerated. Off the coast of Sanya, on the tropical island of Hainan, a commercial underwater data center is being built, with about a hundred capsules to be sunk to host large-scale AI computing, using seawater as a cooling system. It's the first truly commercial bet on this technology.

The frozen north: free cooling on land

You don't have to go underwater. Nordic countries like Iceland, Norway, and Sweden have become magnets for data centers precisely because they combine cold air year-round (natural cooling, almost without air conditioning) with cheap renewable energy (hydroelectric and geothermal). Result: much less electricity and freshwater spent on cooling.

The flip side

It's not a magic solution. Submerging servers raises questions: the heat returned to the ocean can affect local marine ecosystems; maintenance and repair underwater are complex; and the massive placement of infrastructure in the ocean has environmental impacts to be evaluated. Taking everything to the Arctic also concentrates geopolitical and environmental risk in a fragile region.

Conclusion

Underwater and cold-climate data centers are a promising and real direction — not science fiction. They drastically reduce the use of freshwater and energy for cooling, and Project Natick's numbers prove the concept. But they don't replace the essential: more efficient computing, clean energy, and reuse of residual heat. They're an ingenious part of the answer to AI's footprint — not the whole answer.

Sources: Microsoft (Project Natick); IEA Energy and AI 2025; reports on the Hainan, China underwater project.

Disclaimer: The content on this site, including news analyses, is generated by Artificial Intelligence algorithms using live climate data and reporting feeds from varied sources. While we use rigorous scientific sources (NOAA, NASA), AI can make mistakes or lack human context. Always cross-check sensitive local actions or claims. We disclaim any liability for autonomous actions taken based on automated content generated on this site.

Tags: underwater data centers, cold-climate data centers, AI water usage, data center energy efficiency, renewable energy, sustainable computing

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