A power shortage could short-circuit Nvidia's rise
54 comments
·August 29, 2025mullingitover
beeflet
Maybe the tariff could encourage local manufacturing of solar? I have no idea, but I suppose that our local manufacturing could be getting killed by economies of scale abroad.
Or I am overthinking it and solar is something that (D) politicians support so the (R) president tautologically must oppose it. Therefore we must not have nice things
downrightmike
We have tried locally, with huge government backing, but that failed. But since it was an Obama initiative, a new attempt will never be tried.
Farmers make more money from wind turbines on their land than their crop. https://ambrook.com/offrange/farm-finance/there-will-be-wind
And that is stable money, works without rain, which crops don't.
bsder
> Maybe the tariff could encourage local manufacturing of solar?
That's what tariffs do ... if you leave them in place for extended periods of time.
The problem is that nobody is going to bet their business on what the tariffs will be tomorrow when it could be 10x or zero.
Businesses are just going to stop and hold their breath until Trump goes away.
jedberg
I worked for a company making GPU clouds. The biggest problem we had for deployments was not getting GPUs -- we had plenty of those sitting in warehouses. The biggest issue was finding data center space with sufficient power and cooling. There was plenty of square footage, just not enough power for it all.
They're now building gigawatt datacenters to handle all the GPUs.
The big question is were to build them. There are only a few places with cheap and plentiful power. One of those is Quebec (but it's not that big and there is a lot of regulation). Another is Texas (except their grid isn't very stable). And the last is China. And you can't build a datacenter in China unless you're Chinese.
It'll be interesting to see how this pans out. Maybe the current admin (which is big on deregulation) will make it easier to build power plants, especially nuclear ones.
Edit: I wrote this comment four days ago. I couldn't figure out why I was suddenly getting a bunch of replies to it. Apparently when HN does a second chance, they just reset the time on all the comments. Odd, but I guess it makes sense knowing what I know about how the sorting is calculated. It's probably the easiest way.
tw04
> Maybe the current admin (which is big on deregulation) will make it easier to build power plants, especially nuclear ones.
They aren’t big on deregulation at all. They’re big on selective regulation. They’re also big on killing any power project that isn’t oil or coal.
https://apnews.com/article/trump-offshore-wind-renewable-ene...
We are in for a painful lesson on why China’s investment in renewables wasn’t just good for their ecology.
joak
Nuclear power plants take something like a decade to build (after permitting)
It makes more sense to go for PV plus batteries that can be installed in a matter of weeks
senectus1
South Korea built 13 nuclear reactors in recent decades, with an average construction period of 56 months...
Apparently Japan is the fastest builder (46 months).
the 10 year+ issue is a western problem.
zetazzed
Ok but telling someone they can have GPUs online in a mere 5 years if they build as fast as SK is still going to be a very painful pill. How do we get a DC in a year?
worik
That did not go well for the Japanese
lukebechtel
how much of that 10 years is the physical limit, and how much is social / cultural / organizational / political overhead?
adrianN
Does that matter much when you want to have a datacenter as quickly as possible? It’s not like those things will change quickly.
protocolture
From memory, when the brits got out of their own way they could build a nuke plant every 6-8 years.
eli_gottlieb
Skill issue!
jeffbee
> after permitting
Load-bearing parenthetical!
> Nuclear power plants take something like a decade to build
The most-recently completed fission power station on this planet needed 23 years under construction and it is still in testing. A recent American one took 15 years.
protocolture
When the brits were at it (With insourced nuclear engineering and low regulatory overhead) they could crank them out every 6 - 8 years.
The brits let all that technical capability wither and could not do it again right now.
But if someone was willing its still theoretically possible. Just takes total alignment between government and private.
jdboyd
In my part of PA there are 3 in the process of going in nearby. I think the largest of the 3 is "only" 828 megawatts though. One of the others is supposed to be 300MW, and I'm not sure about the 3rd. There is another group talking about 3 more campuses with a combined power budget of 1.3GW about 55 miles from here. But then while we don't have cheap land, we do have nuclear and hydroelectric in the area, so I guess the makes it attractive.
MadDemon
Places further north are great contenders because of the free cooling. Also, many of them have cheap electricity from hydro or even geothermal, like Iceland.
wmf
The Texas grid is stable now that they added batteries BTW.
bob1029
I think Texas (ERCOT) is a terrible option these days. Meta recently made a fantastic choice by picking Louisiana for their new monster. The MISO grid tends to be cheaper and less volatile than ERCOT.
philipallstar
Making it easier to build nuclear power stations would be extremely useful. Let's hope nothing of value is lost in that process.
general1726
I bet on natural gas powerplants will start being built together with data centers.
wmf
Ironically xAI is already doing this.
xbmcuser
I got down voted when I said China is likely to win the AI race as they are also targeting the other big cost of computing power/energy on another thread. Today solar + BESS is cheaper than coal where as costs for both keep decreasing each year.
blackoil
Remove restrictions on solar import from China. 62 GW may sound a large number, but China added 277GW solar in just 2024. They have the surplus capacity and hence cheapest price.
adriand
China installed 3 gigawatts of solar power every day in May: equivalent to building one coal-fired power plant every 8 hours. They are so far ahead of the US on renewables now that even if Trump had not sold out the future of the country to the fossil fuel industry, the US would have been hard-pressed to catch up.
XorNot
This is honestly one of the stupidest things about this sort of policy: solar panels last 20 years and China can't take them away once you have them.
If you're doing something much more valuable with the power, then buying a lot of PV from China makes sense. If you think the panels are being unfairly subsidized then buying a lot of PV from China is effectively having the Chinese government pay you to have cheap power.
There's an enormous difference between being dependent on short term consumable resources,.and acquiring multidecadel productive assets.
The US at all points seems to not understand it's relationship with China at all.
Panzer04
Most people are economically illiterate and don't understand what subsidies actually imply.
They literally only "hurt" you if you have the local industry to harm to begin with. Otherwise, if someone else is paying the subsidy, it gives you a good for cheaper than you could have had otherwise.
The current admin just turns this up to 11 with their ideologically driven nonsense.
starchild3001
My hunch: we’ll see three things happen in parallel
- AI backend providers vertically integrating into energy production (like xAI’s gas plants, or Meta’s local generation experiments),
- renewed interest in genuinely efficient computing paradigms (e.g. reversible/approximate computing, analog accelerators),
- a political battle over whether AI workloads deserve priority access to power vs. EVs, homes, or manufacturing, alongside an increase in energy prices.
You need cheap, reliable power + political/regulatory willingness + cooling. That’s a very short list of geographies. And even then, power buildout timelines (whether nuclear, gas, or grid-scale solar+batteries) move at "utility speed", which is decades, not quarters. That doesn’t match the cadence of GPU product launches.
niemandhier
Energy efficient computing is a very exciting field. I hope it will get more attention driven by these economic constraints.
As a short teaser: Landauers principle suggests that the energy required to erase one bit off information is bounded from below by k_BTln(2). This could lead us down a path towards reversible computing, to avoid energy costs for deleting information.
wmf
The work started around 10-15 years ago and is now largely done. Many people confuse large absolute numbers like 1 kW with inefficiency but today's GPUs/TPUs are close to the practical efficiency limit with today's 3 nm technology.
estimator7292
I think it's mostly because laypeople think that all heat is wasted heat. Most people are pretty surprised to learn that there's a fundamental energy cost to flip a bit and that there even is a lower limit to the amount of heat generated by a bit flip.
beeflet
I think the problem is that you can't get the chips hot enough to drive an efficient industrial process unless you are using GaN or something.
The carnot cycle on waste heat is bad
adrianN
They might be close to the limit for what they do (I don’t know), but are they close to the limit of what we need them for?
31b3r3t7
Why Nvidia is desperate to get back to China: https://youtu.be/DMVAqABLkxk?si=FsyHMGmGEVPUGAot
pbd
The timing mismatch is crucial - data centers can be built in 12-18 months, but new power generation takes 5-10 years minimum. We're essentially trying to scale AI demand faster than energy infrastructure can physically respond. This creates interesting arbitrage opportunities in power-rich but compute-poor regions.
orbisvicis
Ah, finally an acknowledgement that the melting 12VHPWR connectors short-circuiting Nvidia's top-of-the-line hardware, the RTX 4090 and 5090, may finally have economic ramifications. Heh.
worik
Question: Is piping data a long distance more cost effective than energy?
I would have thought so.
If so building data centres near hydro or geothermal plants (I'm from New Zealand where we have a lot of both) would make sense
wmf
Yes, but I think all of that cheap power has been used up already in the US.
tehjoker
What is the point of all this? Why are we using so much power for hallucinated google search?
MadnessASAP
Because, for the time being, people are buying it.
iainctduncan
Well .... investors are funding it. Take those away and nowhere near enough people want the price on the tin.
null
One really interesting strategy the US could pursue here would be to heavily tariff solar[1] and just randomly attack wind projects[2]. Just completely self-own itself on the two cheapest energy sources.
It wouldn't make any sense, but it would be provocative, really drive engagement.
[1] https://seia.org/news/solar-tariff-impacts/
[2] https://www.npr.org/2025/08/31/nx-s1-5522943/trump-offshore-...