HomeWorldInside China’s AI ‘electron gap’: How a supercharged power grid is reshaping the tech race with the US

Inside China’s AI ‘electron gap’: How a supercharged power grid is reshaping the tech race with the US

China’s massive, cheap and fast-expanding electricity network is turning remote Inner Mongolia into a “cloud valley,” raising fears in Washington that power, not just chips, could decide who leads the global AI race.

December 11, 2025 / 13:59 IST
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Inside China’s AI ‘electron gap’: How a supercharged power grid is reshaping the tech race with the US
Inside China’s AI ‘electron gap’: How a supercharged power grid is reshaping the tech race with the US

China’s rapid expansion of its electricity grid has emerged as a powerful new factor in the global contest over artificial intelligence. While the United States still leads in advanced chips and frontier AI models, China is building something Washington increasingly worries it cannot match: the world’s largest and cheapest supply of electricity for data centres, the Wall Street Journal reported.

The scale of China’s advantage is visible in Inner Mongolia, a region transformed from grazing land into a sprawling web of wind turbines, solar farms and high-voltage power lines. This remote northern territory now hosts more than one hundred new or planned data centres, part of a government drive to exploit abundant land, renewable energy and state-backed infrastructure to support the next era of AI development.

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A grid expanding faster than the world can follow

Between 2010 and 2024, China increased its power production by more than the rest of the world combined. Last year, it generated over twice the electricity consumed in the United States. Some Chinese data centres now pay less than half the power rates faced by American operators. That difference has become a strategic concern in Silicon Valley, where the rising cost of electricity threatens to bottleneck AI growth.