Hot-water cooling addresses the AI power challenge

  • Tuesday, 3rd March 2026 Posted 2 weeks ago in by Phil Alsop
Dr. Peter de Bock, vice president, Data Center Energy and Cooling Technology, Eaton, discusses what the launch of the NVIDIA Rubin platform means for data centre power demand, explaining that it could be a transformative innovation that enables data centres to redirect power to more compute because of hot-water cooling, advanced cold plates and intelligent coolant distribution units (CDUs).
Wannie Park, CEO/founder of LG NOVA-backed PADO, an intelligent energy orchestration platform for...
Mary-Ann Clarke, AECOM’s Director of Data Centre Delivery, believes that developers, utilities,...
Ben Sooter, Director of Agentic AI Initiatives & Distributed AI Architecture at EPRI, and Bal...
Robert Schuetzle, CEO of Infinium, explains that, as power densities of GPUs, CPUs and supporting...
Mike Nagus, CEO of LiNova, a battery tech company, talks backup power infrastructure, UPS and...
Unveiling the science of nickel-zinc (NiZn) batteries. In this video we break down the advantages...
Christina Mertens, vice president of business development, EMEA, at VIRTUS Data Centres, explains...
Simon Kerr, head of heat networks at EnergiRaven, discusses the recent analysis from EnergiRaven...