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Data Centres: Boom and Backlash
6MAY

Singapore prices its conditions up front

4 min read
13:52UTC

Singapore launched its Green Data Centre Roadmap on 30 May, releasing 500 MW of capacity but only under a PUE 1.3 efficiency ceiling and a liquid-cooling mandate.

IndustryDeveloping
Key takeaway

Singapore pre-allocates cost and conditions, so the consent fight never starts after the build.

Singapore launched its Green Data Centre Roadmap on 30 May 2026, announced by Deputy Prime Minister Heng Swee Keat through the IMDA (Infocomm Media Development Authority), the city-state's digital-economy regulator 1. It unlocks at least 300 MW of near-term capacity through efficiency gains, plus 200 MW reserved for operators running on green energy.

IMDA wants every Singapore data centre at a PUE (Power Usage Effectiveness, the ratio of total facility energy to computing energy, where 1.0 is perfect) of 1.3 or below at full IT load within ten years, and mandates liquid or immersion cooling and 26C data-hall temperatures. Singapore had effectively frozen new capacity; this is a metered release with the price of entry stated in advance.

The 1.3 ceiling at full load is demanding enough to rule out air cooling at AI rack densities, which is why the liquid-and-immersion mandate follows automatically. By gating the 200 MW tranche behind it, IMDA turns a capacity release into a cooling-technology mandate. The approach inverts Johor's abrupt halt across the border and tightens the conditional-access template Pure DC and CRU built in Ireland . The US fights consent and cost after a campus is announced; Singapore settles both at the permit stage.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Singapore is a city-state of about 5.8 million people with very limited land and no domestic energy resources. Data centres use a lot of both, which is why Singapore effectively stopped approving new ones for several years. On 30 May 2026, Singapore's government announced it would allow new data centres again, but only under strict rules. Operators must use highly efficient cooling systems, keep data-hall temperatures at 26 degrees Celsius, and hit a specific energy-efficiency score called PUE of 1.3 or better. A separate tranche of 200 MW is reserved for operators running on green energy. The rules are set before any building starts, so disputes over conditions happen at the permit stage rather than in court after construction.

What could happen next?
  • Precedent

    Singapore's conditions-first roadmap offers a replicable template for other land- and energy-constrained Asian jurisdictions, including South Korea and Japan, whose regulators are watching the managed-release model as an alternative to outright freezes.

    Medium term · Suggested
  • Opportunity

    Liquid and immersion cooling vendors gain a captive market: the PUE 1.3 and 26C mandates effectively require their technology at current AI rack densities, creating a regulated demand pull that accelerates adoption beyond Singapore.

    Short term · Assessed
  • Risk

    Operators unable to meet the green-energy gating for the 200 MW tranche face a two-tier Singapore market where compliant hyperscalers lock in the prime allocation and non-green colocation buyers are relegated to the smaller efficiency-only tranche.

    Short term · Suggested
First Reported In

Update #5 · Who pays when the grid bends for AI

RTO Insider· 2 Jun 2026
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Causes and effects
This Event
Singapore prices its conditions up front
Singapore settles the cost and conditions fight inside the permit, the inverse of the US sequence that litigates it after a campus is announced.
Different Perspectives
Global hyperscale operators
Global hyperscale operators
Operators are still filing gigawatt-scale campuses and Meta is proceeding with its $10bn Lebanon, Indiana site despite the county-level bans nearby, betting Q2 capex outruns the patchwork of restrictions. Industry framing casts New York's freeze, Oregon's surcharge and Indiana's bans as taxes and levies that push build-out toward faster-permitting jurisdictions such as India and the Gulf.
EirGrid
EirGrid
EirGrid set a 900 MW instantaneous demand-loss ceiling because a single voltage dip can trip many data centres onto backup power at once, risking imbalance above 1,150 MW. It wrote the limit into a standing procedure rather than waiting for an emergency to force one.
US host communities and ratepayers
US host communities and ratepayers
Prince William residents backed the 8-0 denial of Dulles South over the Occoquan watershed, drinking water for eight million people, while Oregon's approved tariff cuts residential bills 1.3% by charging large loads 29% more. Their position: consent and cost-attribution belong in law, not left to a developer's or a utility's discretion.
Hassan Allam Digital Infrastructure
Hassan Allam Digital Infrastructure
Hassan Allam Digital Infrastructure, an Egyptian conglomerate rather than a foreign hyperscaler, reportedly secured a domestic hyperscale licence with a $400m first phase, per single-source reporting still to be verified. It reads as home-grown sovereign compute ambition, building national capacity rather than importing a US or Gulf operator's campus.
Damac Digital
Damac Digital
Damac Digital keeps building toward roughly 6,000 megawatts of hyperscale capacity across 13 countries while Virginia taxes power and New York weighs a freeze. Every dollar or month of delay a US state adds is capacity a Gulf developer can site somewhere with faster permitting and no equivalent levy.
Acequia communities, Santa Fe County
Acequia communities, Santa Fe County
Santa Fe County commissioners voted unanimously on 2 July to freeze any data centre over one megawatt, citing the acequia irrigation commons that has shared scarce water since Spanish colonial rule. They expect the low threshold to draw the same Fifth Amendment challenge RCM Hill brought against Hill County, Texas.