The Power Allocation

Data centers don't just need power — they need cheap power. And the geography of electricity pricing is reshaping where AI infrastructure gets built.

Show Notes

Data centers don't just need power — they need cheap power. And the geography of electricity pricing is reshaping where AI infrastructure gets built.
For a 100-megawatt facility running 24/7, each cent per kilowatt-hour represents roughly $8.7 million in annual operating cost. A 5-cent differential means $43 million per year — nearly a billion dollars over a 20-year horizon.
Power pricing is creating durable geographic advantages that no amount of tax credits can offset. Capital follows the electrons.]]>

What is The Power Allocation?

The AI boom isn't constrained by chips, algorithms, or talent. It's constrained by electricity.

The Power Allocation is a daily briefing on AI infrastructure — where capital is actually being deployed. Each episode cuts through the hype to examine the physical realities shaping the AI buildout: power constraints, grid interconnection, land acquisition, data center financing, cooling infrastructure, and utility relationships.

This isn't a software podcast. This is an infrastructure podcast.

Who it's for: Institutional investors, infrastructure allocators, data center developers, utilities, family offices, and anyone positioning capital for the physical layer of artificial intelligence.

What you'll learn:

Why power availability — not GPU supply — is the binding constraint on AI compute
How hyperscalers are locking in multi-decade power purchase agreements
Where data centers are relocating and why grid geography is reshaping the industry
The financing structures turning compute facilities into bond-like assets
What execution timelines, permitting delays, and interconnection queues mean for capital deployment
Format: 3-6 minute episodes. Dense. Clear. No hype.

New episodes daily. Subscribe wherever you listen.