Delays affecting nearly 40 per cent of new US data centre projects are raising concerns about the speed of global AI deployment. Labour shortages, permitting bottlenecks, and power constraints highlight the growing gap between massive AI investments and the physical infrastructure needed to support them.

-- The artificial intelligence revolution is moving at breakneck speed—but the infrastructure required to power it is struggling to keep pace.
Across the United States, delays to new hyperscale data centres are emerging as a serious bottleneck in the global AI expansion. According to satellite‑based analysis from SynMax, nearly 40 per cent of data centre projects scheduled for completion this year risk falling behind schedule, potentially slowing the deployment of AI services by some of the world’s largest technology companies.
The implications are enormous.
Artificial intelligence development now depends on massive computing infrastructure—facilities capable of housing tens of thousands of advanced processors while drawing extraordinary amounts of electricity. Hyperscale campuses under development today increasingly target 1 gigawatt of power consumption, equivalent to the output of a nuclear power plant.
Yet building these facilities is proving far more complex than the tech industry anticipated.
Industry executives report that projects across the United States are encountering three persistent obstacles: permitting delays, labour shortages, and equipment supply constraints. These logistical hurdles are extending construction timelines and raising concerns about how quickly companies can translate billions of dollars in AI capital expenditure into functioning infrastructure.
One prominent example illustrates the challenge.
A massive 1.4‑gigawatt data centre campus in Shackelford County, Texas, being built for Oracle and designed to support OpenAI computing workloads, was initially expected to begin delivering operational capacity by the second half of 2026. The 1,200‑acre site is planned to host ten separate buildings.
However, satellite imagery tracking the project’s progress shows that while land clearing has begun for multiple structures, only one building currently shows significant construction activity. Analysts estimate that the first operational facility may not be delivered until late 2027 under typical development timelines.
The gap between AI investment and physical infrastructure readiness is widening.
Technology giants, including Amazon Web Services, Microsoft, Meta and xAI are committing tens of billions of dollars to new AI infrastructure, yet the industrial systems required to support these facilities—power grids, skilled labour, cooling systems, and specialised components—are under immense strain.
As Wes Cummins, chief executive of data centre operator Applied Digital, observed bluntly: financing projects at this scale is difficult, but construction logistics and operational complexity may be even harder.
The challenges are also prompting developers and investors to reconsider where future AI infrastructure should be built.
Regions capable of offering stable energy supply, reliable water resources, streamlined permitting processes, and abundant development land are increasingly being viewed as strategic alternatives for next‑generation data centre campuses.
In Southeast Asia, for example, Malaysia has rapidly emerged as a major destination for hyperscale infrastructure, benefiting from lower energy costs and expanding digital connectivity. Within the country, areas such as Tanjong Malim in Perak are attracting attention due to their combination of water availability, transport infrastructure, and proximity to major economic corridors.
Industrial sites such as Sungai Samak Estate are being examined by developers seeking scalable locations capable of supporting integrated AI data centre campuses alongside emerging technology industries. Information on planning considerations and regional infrastructure can be explored through platforms such as https://sgsamak.com, with further enquiries available via https://sgsamak.com/contact-us.
While global demand for artificial intelligence continues to accelerate, the lesson from current US construction delays is clear: the future of AI will be determined not only by software breakthroughs or advanced chips—but by the physical infrastructure capable of supporting them.
In the race to build the world’s AI backbone, land, energy, water and logistics may ultimately prove as valuable as algorithms.
Contact Info:
Name: Holly Lim
Email: Send Email
Organization: Sungai Samak Estate
Address: 2 Jalan Sempurna off Jalan Gombak , Kuala Lumpur, Federal Territory 53000, Malaysia
Website: https://sgsamak.com
Source: NewsNetwork
Release ID: 89190169
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