Why the Digital Revolution Still Runs on Oil?
The expansion of artificial intelligence is frequently described as a departure from the industrial age, yet the physical infrastructure required to sustain it tells a different story. Every advanced AI model depends on sprawling data centers that function as major industrial complexes, requiring immense quantities of steel and cement alongside heavy construction machinery that operates almost exclusively on diesel fuel.
Beyond the construction phase, the hardware itself is inextricably linked to oil through the petrochemical industry. Components such as specialized plastics for server housing, insulation for high-speed cabling, and structural elements within semiconductor facilities are all derived from oil based materials. As AI scales, the demand for these physical assets grows, making the digital revolution a significant driver of industrial and energy consumption rather than a replacement for it.
The economic volatility of the energy market directly translates into the operational costs of technology. When geopolitical tensions in the Middle East cause crude oil prices to surge above $110 per barrel, the impact ripples through the global tech supply chain by increasing the costs of manufacturing semiconductors and transporting hardware across continents.
This vulnerability is particularly acute at strategic maritime chokepoints like the Strait of Hormuz, where roughly 20 million barrels of oil — representing nearly 20% of total global consumption — pass through every day. Furthermore, the International Energy Agency (IEA) provides a stark outlook on the energy requirements for this transition.
Under an accelerated "Lift-Off" growth path, data center electricity demand is projected to skyrocket to 1,750 TWh by 2035, up from a base case of 1,200 TWh. Even with high efficiency optimizations, the demand is expected to hover near 1,000 TWh, ensuring that the cost of energy remains a fundamental constraint on the speed of AI development.
Read more on how the hidden link between energy markets and physical infrastructure could shape the next phase of global AI investment and technological development
Publication date:
2026-03-11 07:20:15 (GMT)