As artificial intelligence applications become more powerful, the digital infrastructure supporting them is facing a new challenge: energy.
AI workloads require significantly more computing power than traditional applications, placing increasing demands on electricity, cooling systems and energy efficiency in data centres. As a result, energy resilience, sustainability and system efficiency are becoming critical considerations as digital infrastructure expands to support the growth of AI.
Bridge Data Centres (BDC), a Singapore-headquartered digital infrastructure platform backed by Bain Capital, is advancing a range of initiatives aimed at developing more sustainable energy solutions for next-generation data centres. These initiatives are designed to strengthen long-term power strategies while supporting the continued growth of AI workloads across Asia-Pacific.
The company’s approach combines new energy technologies, research collaborations and industry partnerships to explore alternative power pathways for digital infrastructure.
BDC has established partnerships with global leaders in energy and energy storage technologies, including CATL, EcoCeres and SK Innovation.
Through these collaborations, the partners will explore the development and pilot deployment of clean energy solutions such as hydrogen and biomass energy, as well as next-generation energy storage technologies designed for tropical climates.
These initiatives aim to enhance thermal management, improve safety performance and increase the power density of data centre energy storage systems. The partnerships will also explore the establishment of innovation and research platforms to support the development and deployment of these technologies across digital infrastructure environments.
BDC signed a memorandum of understanding with SK Innovation, joining forces to bring innovative energy solutions to next-generation data centres.
PHOTO: BRIDGE DATA CENTRES
BDC is also pushing the envelope in innovative and sustainable cooling solutions through collaborations with ecosystem technology partners such as Vertiv, Terahop and Teracule, subsidiaries of Zhongji Innolight, as well as Delta Electronics and Supermicro.
Many of these partners are established leaders in data centre cooling, power systems and high-performance computing infrastructure, working closely with leading chipmakers to support next-generation compute environments.





