NVIDIA’s Liquid Cooled “AI GPU” Data Centers To Cost A Lot As Component Pricing Soars

Muhammad Zuhair
NVIDIA's Liquid Cooled "AI GPU" Data Centers To Cost A Lot As Component Pricing Soars 1

With the anticipation of NVIDIA's Blackwell AI GPUs, the demand for large-scale water-cooling components has risen drastically, with high adoption in data centers.

With The Anticipation of Increased Demand Of Industrial Water-Cooling Solutions For NVIDIA's AI GPUs, A Shortage Has Come Into Play

NVIDIA's Blackwell AI GPUs will bring in significant performance increases, with also some high power consumption figures (up to 1200W). This would prompt data centers to move away from conventional cooling methods. One of the more effective options out there is the utilization of water cooling, and it has already seen widespread adoption in the markets, with NVIDIA's CEO declaring it as the next option. In light of this, Taiwan Economic Daily reports that the demand for water-cooling solutions has risen tremendously as firms try to capitalize early on.

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The Chairman of the Taiwan Heat Management Association has disclosed that vital components involved in the water-cooling process have gone out of stock in the markets, accrediting it to the AI hype and how individuals and clients are leveraging the situation by creating an artificial shortage of such components. The official has disclosed that water-cooled data centers are the future of the AI markets and crucial for the sustainability of future products. There are many companies aware of this huge demand for water-cooled servers and data centers & are opening up dedicated plants which will focus on manufacturing such cooling equipment.

Image Credits: Microsoft

The importance of water cooling for the data center segment to move ahead was reiterated by NVIDIA's CEO himself, who stated that the future data centers will be cooled through liquid heat dissipation. It is important to note that Blackwell-focused AI GPU servers might witness a massive adoption of water-cooling technology, & because of how sensitive setting up the process (onboard plates and water distribution methods) is, there is a limited supply right now, which has created a bottleneck, resulting in soared prices.

Now, this means that the upcoming data centers will be priced relatively higher than the previous ones, not just because of the generational upgrades but also because the adoption of liquid cooling will be pricey this might. It could create an order backlog if the industry doesn't deal with the supply chain inefficiencies quickly.

Muhammad Zuhair Photo

About the author: Muhammad Zuhair is a hardware and technology reporter for Wccftech, specializing in the semiconductor industry and the complex interplay between technology, manufacturing, and geopolitics. His coverage focuses on the corporate strategies and technological roadmaps of industry giants like TSMC, NVIDIA, Samsung, and Intel. Zuhair's expertise lies in deconstructing complex topics such as fabrication nodes (e.g., 2nm process), the economic impact of policies like the CHIPS Act, and the strategic development of AI infrastructure from NVIDIA, AMD and Intel.

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