IT in Manufacturing


How digital infrastructure design choices will decide who wins in AI

I&C February 2026 IT in Manufacturing

As AI drives continues to disrupt industries across the world, the race is no longer just about smarter models or better data. It’s about building infrastructure powerful enough to support innovation at scale. Staying competitive therefore demands more than incremental upgrades; it requires a forward-looking strategy built to handle today’s intensity and tomorrow’s unknowns.


Canninah Dladla, cluster president for English-speaking Africa at Schneider Electric.

Organisations that treat digital infrastructure as a strategic business investment are setting the pace. And decisions around energy efficiency, improved thermal management and modular design are directly influencing AI performance, speed to market, operational cost and long-term competitiveness.

The strategic imperative

Historically, power and cooling sat firmly in the ‘necessary expense’ category, essential to maintain but rarely viewed as a source of competitive advantage. That reality has changed. Infrastructure now directly affects AI workload performance, deployment timelines, sustainability targets, and overall business value.

The numbers don’t lie. In 2025, leading technology companies including Meta, Amazon, Alphabet, and Microsoft, invested a record $320 billion in AI infrastructure and data centres. This represents a 65% increase from the previous year, with 60% of the investment allocated specifically to data centre expansion.

This unparalleled spending underscores the industry’s recognition of AI infrastructure as a fundamental business necessity rather than a basic operational concern.

The spotlight on thermal management

As operators race to optimise infrastructure, thermal management has become one of the most urgent priorities. AI compute intensity is pushing rack power densities well beyond traditional thresholds.

Indeed, some AI-optimised facilities exceeded 140 kW per rack by the second half of 2025, a clear indicator that previous cooling methods are no longer sufficient.

Liquid cooling has moved from an emerging trend to unavoidable necessity. It enables far higher compute density while reducing energy consumption and operational costs.

However, adopting liquid cooling also introduces new operational complexities, requiring highly coordinated control systems, specialised expertise, and precision engineering. As rack densities continue to rise, the margin for error shrinks. This makes experienced partners essential to help organisations scale safely and efficiently.

Availability and efficiency

AI workloads demand vast, uninterrupted power delivery. To ensure resilience and sustainability, data centres must embrace energy-efficient designs and establish close partnerships with utilities to integrate renewable energy sources and smart grid technologies.

Partnerships are proving critical in meeting these requirements. One example is the collaboration between Schneider Electric and Nvidia, focused on AI-optimised data centre reference architectures capable of supporting server racks consuming up to 142 kW, and incorporating liquid cooling technologies to reduce cooling energy consumption and accelerate deployment.

Modularity and speed

AI development cycles continue to accelerate, which means infrastructure must match that pace or risk bottlenecks. Modular, prefabricated and scalable architectures are emerging as core enablers for high-density deployments, allowing data centre operators to build, expand and standardise rapidly and efficiently.

The reality is that conventional data centre construction often requires 18 to 24 months, but modular, standardised infrastructure is compressing that timeline, enabling fully commissioned facilities in as little as seven months.

With these time savings, it’s no surprise that the global modular data centere market is developing fast, with MarketsandMarkets projecting growth from $29,9 billion in 2024 to nearly $79,5 billion by 2030.

Continue to innovate

Forward-thinking business leaders who treat digital infrastructure as a long-term strategic investment are setting themselves up for greater agility, cost efficiency and resilience.

To stay ahead, data centre operators and enterprise decision makers must recognise that gaining a competitive edge requires a relentless focus on innovation to navigate the ever-evolving, ever-increasing demands of AI. It takes technical expertise, trusted partnerships and a willingness to adopt bold, cutting-edge technologies.

Schneider Electric is answering that call with a new generation of integrated, scalable solutions designed for AI. From high-density power distribution to advanced thermal management and intelligent pod and rack configurations, these solutions are built to speed up deployment and drive operational efficiencies.

Ultimately, by aligning with forward-thinking partners, like Schneider Electric, organisations can stay on the cutting edge of innovation and better position themselves to win the AI race.


Credit(s)



Share this article:
Share via emailShare via LinkedInPrint this page

Further reading:

How smart signalling can transform Africa’s manufacturing future
Schneider Electric South Africa Industrial Wireless
Imagine a factory floor where humans and machines communicate in real time with issues flagged instantly, workflows adjusted seamlessly and downtime reduced to near zero. This is the reality unfolding across Africa as manufacturers embrace the next generation of intelligent signalling technologies.

Read more...
Unpacking the technoeconomic case for cleaner power in wastewater plants
Schneider Electric South Africa Electrical Power & Protection
Behind every reliable wastewater plant is an electrical system exposed to the effects of harmonics, voltage distortion and overloaded networks caused by fleets of variable speed drives on pumps and aerators.Together, they steadily drive up maintenance demands and elevate the risk of failure.

Read more...
Advanced DCSs preserve what must not change while enabling
Schneider Electric South Africa PLCs, DCSs & Controllers
Next-generation DCSs, such as Schneider Electric’s Foxboro, are preserving the best of the old while introducing the new in a less disruptive manner.

Read more...
Rethinking power for Africa’s data centres
Schneider Electric South Africa Electrical Power & Protection
Africa’s digital economy is scaling faster than its power systems. If it wants resilient, competitive and sustainable data centres, the starting point must be a grid-to-chip architecture rather than a genset-first mentality.

Read more...
Siemens ecosystem strengthens data and AI integration
Siemens South Africa IT in Manufacturing
Siemens has announced significant expansions to its Industrial Edge ecosystem, accelerating data and AI integration and releasing enhanced cybersecurity functionalities. These enable a seamless integration of IT and OT environments, optimise processes and reduce operational disruptions.

Read more...
Unifying building information into a sea of insight
Schneider Electric South Africa Electrical Power & Protection
Facility managers realise that in order to gain the most from building automation, they can longer deploy and operate technologies in isolation. Modern, integrated building management solutions address this challenge by bringing data from multiple sources and dispersed locations like HVAC, lighting, access control, lifts, generators, field devices, energy and

Read more...
Why digital LV switchboards matter
Schneider Electric South Africa Electrical Power & Protection
Today’s buildings account for up to 40% of global energy consumption and CO2 emissions. However, buildings are also expected to deliver higher availability and stronger safety performance while also being sustainable. Digital swirchboards make a difference in the way buildings are developed, upgraded and managed.

Read more...
Siemens manages shipbuilding process for HD Hyundai
Siemens South Africa IT in Manufacturing
Siemens has been selected by HD Korea Shipbuilding & Offshore Engineering as a preferred partner to establish an integrated platform to manage the entire shipbuilding process as a single data flow to help ensure consistency across all its global shipyard facilities.

Read more...
The new energy landscape for buildings will be enabled by e-mobility
Schneider Electric South Africa Electrical Power & Protection
The adoption of the electric vehicle continues to proliferate, and buildings are becoming a vital part of the e-mobility movement, which requires a whole new approach to energy management.

Read more...
Transforming the process industry through digitalisation
Endress+Hauser South Africa IT in Manufacturing
By connecting field devices, systems and people, digitalisation creates new opportunities to optimise operations, enhance maintenance strategies and support continuous improvement. As a leading instrumentation provider and major source of process data, Endress+Hauser plays a key role in enabling this transformation.

Read more...









While every effort has been made to ensure the accuracy of the information contained herein, the publisher and its agents cannot be held responsible for any errors contained, or any loss incurred as a result. Articles published do not necessarily reflect the views of the publishers. The editor reserves the right to alter or cut copy. Articles submitted are deemed to have been cleared for publication. Advertisements and company contact details are published as provided by the advertiser. Technews Publishing (Pty) Ltd cannot be held responsible for the accuracy or veracity of supplied material.




© Technews Publishing (Pty) Ltd | All Rights Reserved