Our societal and business reliance on data is growing exponentially as we move towards a digitalised world.
In recent years, data centre demand has primarily been driven by the cloud giants – enterprise companies, financial institutions, government agencies have all been moving to the cloud. Hyperscalers are leading the way in a market expected to grow at a CAGR of 24.25% over forecast period 2019-20241.
So, what are the trends that continue to drive this growth of data centres into the ‘20s?
Today greater numbers of enterprises are migrating their data centres to the cloud, and hybrid systems have started coming more into effect where enterprises mix inhouse computing with the movement of larger systems to the cloud.
Growth in power demand continues to outweigh the many gains in energy efficiency that we are seeing in data centres – a shift to sustainable power and recognition of the UN SDGs has started. We will see more of a shift to renewable energy as data centre operators move to a carbon neutral footprint.
COVID-19, it seems, has caused seismic shifts to both usage patterns and scale of activity. Businesses moving operations to the cloud, a work from home workforce, remote learning through education providers etc, all means that data centres are continuing to expand, seemingly at an even faster pace than before.
Digital trends will continue to drive data centre growth – artificial intelligence, autonomous vehicles, robotics and IoT. And with AI growth, Edge data centres will play a critical role in the ability to store and analyse data closer to the source.
In a world where we want everything faster, cheaper, bigger, it makes sense that we move to a digital way of working, where everything is automated, from the designs we carry out to the products we build, manage and operate.
Digital services and automation will be the way forward.