Hitachi Energy
Grid technology company; competes with Prolec/GE Vernova in the transformer supply crunch.
Last refreshed: 16 May 2026 · Appears in 1 active topic
Can Hitachi Energy scale transformer production fast enough to meet data-centre demand?
Timeline for Hitachi Energy
Mentioned in: GE Vernova prices the transformer bottleneck
Data Centres: Boom and BacklashMentioned in: Texas grid queue hits 410 GW
Data Centres: Boom and BacklashHow long does it take to get a power transformer in 2026?
What is Hitachi Energy and who owns it?
Why are power transformers so hard to get for data centres?
Background
Hitachi Energy is a global power technology company headquartered in Zurich, Switzerland, wholly owned by Hitachi Ltd since December 2022. The company traces its origins to ABB's Power Grids division, which Hitachi acquired in 2020 and rebranded in 2021. With $16 billion in annual revenue and 58,000 employees, it is one of the three largest suppliers of high-voltage grid equipment, transformers, and HVDC systems in the world.
Hitachi Energy's transformer business is central to the data-centre supply bottleneck. Alongside Prolec GE (now part of GE Vernova after a $5.28bn acquisition in April 2026) and Siemens, Hitachi Energy faces lead times stretched to five years for large power transformers, a constraint created by the simultaneous acceleration of hyperscaler data-centre construction and renewable energy grid interconnection. Data-centre electrification orders across the industry hit record levels in Q1 2026.
The company's HVDC technology is also relevant to the data-centre grid challenge: long-distance HVDC connections from renewable generation zones to data-centre clusters are one proposed route around local grid congestion. Hitachi Energy delivered the HVDC infrastructure for the North Sea Link submarine cable between Norway and the UK, demonstrating capability in exactly the kind of grid infrastructure that data-centre operators need at scale.