➤ Key Highlights
Crusoe reports contracts for nearly 5GW of data center capacity.
It paused development of a 1.8GW Cheyenne, WY campus at a customer’s request.
The Wyoming site was being built with Blackstone-backed energy firm Tallgrass.
Global Q1 supply reached 16GW across the 16 largest markets, up 25% YoY.
Vacancy sits near record lows despite the supply wave.
➤ SIGNAL
Demand isn’t the bottleneck — power delivery is.
Even fully-contracted projects can stall waiting on the grid.
Land and financing no longer guarantee a buildable site.
The data center narrative has quietly inverted. For years the question was whether AI demand could absorb new supply. Now it’s whether the grid can energize it. Crusoe pausing a 1.8GW campus it had a customer for is the cleanest evidence yet.
Projects that secured land and capital are stalling on grid interconnection, transformers, and generation that doesn’t physically exist yet. Adding 16GW globally in a quarter — up 25% — while vacancy stays near record lows tells you demand is outrunning deliverable power.
That reshapes site selection entirely: power availability and interconnection queue position now outrank land cost, labor, and even tax incentives. Underwriting a data center now means underwriting an energy project — diligence has to lead with interconnection timelines, utility commitments, and on-site generation. The assets that win will be the ones that controlled power before they controlled land.
➤ TAKEAWAY
In data centers, megawatts are the new dirt — and the grid now decides which projects get built.
Source: Bloomberg — June 9, 2026







