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While the U.S. is just beginning its buildout of extra-high-voltage (765kV) power lines, China has already developed and deployed a more advanced class of 'ultra-high-voltage' (1,100kV) lines. These lines can transmit power over thousands of miles, representing a significant technological and infrastructure lead over the United States in the global race for energy dominance.
While the US currently leads in AI with superior chips, China's state-controlled power grid is growing 10x faster and can be directed towards AI data centers. This creates a scenario where if AGI is a short-term race, the US wins. If it's a long-term build-out, China's superior energy infrastructure could be the deciding factor.
China's investment in green technology is driven less by environmentalism and more by strategic goals. By dominating renewables and EVs, China reduces its dependence on foreign oil—a key vulnerability in a potential conflict with the US—while building global soft power and boosting its GDP through green tech exports.
The primary constraint on AI development is shifting from semiconductor availability to energy production. While the US has excelled at building data centers, its energy production growth is just 2.4%, compared to China's 6%. This disparity in energy infrastructure could become the deciding factor in the global AI race.
While the focus is on chips and algorithms, the real long-term constraint for US AI dominance is its aging and stagnant power grid. In contrast, China's massive, ongoing investments in renewable and nuclear energy are creating a strategic advantage to power future data centers.
Beyond algorithms and talent, China's key advantage in the AI race is its massive investment in energy infrastructure. While the U.S. grid struggles, China is adding 10x more solar capacity and building 33 nuclear plants, ensuring it will have the immense power required to train and run future AI models at scale.
Beyond the well-known semiconductor race, the AI competition is shifting to energy. China's massive, cheaper electricity production is a significant, often overlooked strategic advantage. This redefines the AI landscape, suggesting that superiority in atoms (energy) may become as crucial as superiority in bytes (algorithms and chips).
While semiconductor access is a critical choke point, the long-term constraint on U.S. AI dominance is energy. Building massive data centers requires vast, stable power, but the U.S. faces supply chain issues for energy hardware and lacks a unified grid. China, in contrast, is strategically building out its energy infrastructure to support its AI ambitions.
The US is betting on winning the AI race by building the smartest models. However, China has strategically mastered the entire "electric stack"—energy generation, batteries, grids, and manufacturing. Beijing offers the world the 21st-century infrastructure needed to power AI, while Washington focuses on 20th-century energy sources.
The global energy transition is also a geopolitical race. China is strategically positioning itself to dominate 21st-century technologies like solar and EVs. In contrast, the U.S. is hampered by a legacy mindset that equates economic growth with fossil fuels, risking its future competitiveness.
The massive energy demand from AI data centers is driving a $75 billion buildout of extra-high-voltage (765kV) power lines, a class of infrastructure capable of moving six times more power than standard lines. The presence of wealthy AI companies as guaranteed buyers de-risks these huge projects for grid operators, creating a foundational upgrade for U.S. industrial capacity akin to the interstate highway system.