AI is driving a surge in electricity demand, forcing governments and technology companies to search for more efficient computing systems
Published Tue, Mar 10, 2026 · 08:32 AM
[SINGAPORE] Biotech startup Cortical Labs is working on two small data centres run by human brain cells, putting lab-grown neurons onto silicon in an experiment that could one day challenge chips from the likes of Nvidia.
The Australia-based startup unveiled its first biological data centre in Melbourne and is building another in Singapore with partner DayOne Data Centers, it said on Tuesday (Mar 10). Instead of racks of servers running on conventional processors, the facilities will house biological computers known as CL1 units, powered by human brain cells.
While years or decades away from challenging mainstream technology, the project highlights scientists’ search for novel solutions to address problems arising from an artificial intelligence (AI)-induced need for increasing amounts of computing capacity. The swift buildout of AI data centres across the planet has led to environmental concerns over their power needs and water consumption as well as shortages in silicon.





