For months, the world has obsessed over the “chip war” — who can build the fastest, smallest, and smartest silicon. But the next great AI battle won’t be fought in clean rooms. It’ll be fought in power plants.
A leaked OpenAI letter to the White House revealed an uncomfortable truth: America will need to double its annual electricity generation just to keep pace with AI growth — 100 gigawatts a year, twice the entire capacity added in 2024. China, meanwhile, added more than four times that amount. The global race for AI dominance has quietly become a race for energy security.
From Microsoft’s $15.2 billion data-center investment in the UAE to China subsidizing electricity for ByteDance and Alibaba, every major player now faces the same constraint — not compute, but current. And behind every transistor and every model sits a nation scrambling for control of the grid.
In Taiwan, the story evolves differently. While the world worries about power, TSMC is re-architecting the physical limits of silicon with its CoWoS packaging — stacking chips like skyscrapers and shaping what many now call its “second moat.” It’s a reminder that in the AI era, true advantage comes not just from speed, but from the ability to reshape the entire supply chain.
This week’s episode of Inside Taiwan dives deep into how energy, materials, and innovation collide to define the next phase of AI power — literal and geopolitical.
Listen to the full episode to understand why the real AI revolution begins long before the data ever reaches the chip.
【About the Show】
Inside Taiwan distills 200 stories a day from over 30 trusted Traditional Chinese and English sources into a ten-minute executive briefing. It’s an AI-powered signal over noise for global investors and decision-makers navigating the world’s most valuable supply chain.