Data center developers are increasingly turning to onsite power generation and carbon capture technologies to bypass grid capacity constraints, according to Bloom Energy’s Mid-Year Pulse Report. New data indicates that 31% of onsite-powered data centers plan to integrate carbon capture, utilization, and storage (CCUS) by 2030, a figure expected to rise to 41% by 2035 as electricity demand from artificial intelligence infrastructure scales rapidly.
Why are data centers going off-grid?
Power availability has become the primary bottleneck for the digital infrastructure industry. According to the Bloom Energy survey of 156 industry decision-makers, 61% of developers prefer to deploy onsite power generation rather than relocate facilities when faced with grid access limitations. With US data center electricity demand projected to double by 2030, developers are choosing to secure their own power sources to avoid project delays.
How does CCUS solve the emissions dilemma?
While onsite power solves the speed-to-market issue, it creates significant challenges for companies with public net-zero emissions targets. Integrating CCUS allows operators to mitigate the carbon footprint of their independent generation systems. According to the report, this technology is shifting from a peripheral environmental consideration to a foundational architectural requirement for new facilities. By pairing onsite energy with scalable abatement, companies aim to satisfy both operational energy demands and long-term climate commitments.

The competitive shift in AI infrastructure
Success in the AI era is no longer defined solely by computational capacity. Industry leaders are now judged by their ability to navigate complex permitting processes, maintain community support, and manage local emissions. While grid-tied facilities rely on utility-scale renewables, onsite-powered facilities represent a new model of self-sufficiency. This dual-strategy approach—generating power locally while capturing the resulting emissions—is becoming a standard for hyperscalers and colocation providers alike.
Frequently Asked Questions
Why is grid capacity a problem for data centers?
The rapid expansion of artificial intelligence infrastructure has caused a surge in electricity demand that existing utility grids are struggling to accommodate, leading to project delays for many developers.
What is the role of CCUS in data centers?
Carbon capture, utilization, and storage (CCUS) technologies allow data centers that rely on independent, onsite power generation to reduce their carbon output and remain compliant with net-zero emissions targets.
Will most data centers be off-grid by 2030?
The Bloom Energy report projects that approximately one-third of US data centers will operate on independent, onsite power by 2030 as a direct response to grid capacity bottlenecks.
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