- The rise of AI-generated services is placing extreme pressure on the global power grid.
- With data center electrification and sustainability both climbing corporate and regulatory agendas, platinum is emerging as a strategically essential asset.
- PLG’s Waterberg Project is among the largest and lowest-cost undeveloped platinum group metal resources in the world.
The rapid expansion of AI applications is igniting an unprecedented demand for data center capacity, and Platinum Group Metals (NYSE American: PLG) (TSX: PTM), a prominent platinum explorer and developer, is working to develop a supply of platinum crucial for powering the future of clean, resilient electrical infrastructure. Amid this AI-driven energy surge, platinum is central to hydrogen fuel cells and advanced electrical components, marking PLG as a potential player in meeting tomorrow’s power needs.
The rise of AI-generated services is placing extreme pressure on the global power grid. According to a World Platinum Investment Council report, global electricity demand from data centers is expected to more than double to around 945 TWh by 2030—surpassing the entire electricity consumption of Japan today—with AI-optimized sites driving over fourfold growth in that sector alone (https://ibn.fm/suwQq). In the United States, data centers already account for roughly half of new electricity demand, pressuring grids to adapt quickly (https://ibn.fm/PuTB9). Experts warn these facilities could represent nearly 9% of total U.S. grid demand by 2030 ) (https://ibn.fm/7joVo).
This deepening reliance on digital infrastructure is fueling investor interest in technologies that deliver clean, behind-the-meter power. Hydrogen fuel cells powered by platinum-containing proton exchange membranes (“PEM”) offer an appealing solution. These systems convert hydrogen into electricity with no direct emissions, producing only water and heat through an electrochemical process (https://ibn.fm/omb91).
Infrastructure firms, including Vertiv and Microsoft via Ballard, are piloting large-scale PEM-based backup systems ranging from hundreds of kW to multi-megawatt arrays. Plug Power is already deploying platinum-based PEM electrolyzers and fuel cells to support uninterrupted, zero-emission power for AI-centered data centers in the U.S.
Critically, these fuel cells are not just for offline backup — they’re fast starting and capable of responding to dynamic load demands, making them well-suited for the fluctuating energy needs of AI systems. And when paired with green hydrogen, generated from electrolysis powered by solar or wind, the entire power cycle becomes fossil free. The WPIC projects that roughly one-third of the global electrolyzer market will rely on platinum-containing PEM technology (https://ibn.fm/GPPWX), highlighting platinum’s pivotal role in the clean-energy transition.
With data center electrification and sustainability both climbing corporate and regulatory agendas, platinum is emerging as a strategically essential asset. This is where Platinum Group Metals comes into play. The company operates the Waterberg Project in South Africa’s Northern Limb of the Bushveld Complex, among the largest and lowest-cost undeveloped platinum group metal (“PGM”) resources in the world. The mine is designed for bulk mechanized extraction targeting platinum, palladium, rhodium, gold, copper and nickel, making it potentially an important supplier of clean-tech metals (https://ibn.fm/ezC7M).
The project’s scale and grade have drawn industry attention. Waterberg holds a significant PGM reserve base, backed by proven and probable reserves totaling 23.4 million ounces of combined platinum, palladium, rhodium and gold (“4E”) in 246 million tonnes of ore at a 4E grade of 2.96 grams per tonne. Its September 2024 definitive feasibility study (“DFS”) identifies Waterberg as a low-cost, fully mechanized underground operation, potentially placing it among the top-tier PGM assets globally. Joint venture partners include Impala Platinum Holdings Limited, state owned entity Japan Oil, Gas and Metals National Corporation (“JOGMEC”), Hanwa Co., and BEE partner Mnombo Wethu Consultants Proprietary Limited (https://ibn.fm/TwyLE).
In the long run, AI and data-center growth are expected to pressure not just electricity infrastructure but also critical metal supply chains. Platinum’s dual role — as a core catalyst material in PEM systems and as a resilient industrial metal with unique properties — makes it vital to the emerging energy-intelligence economy. As demand for clean, resilient power scales, PLG’s Waterberg positioning and upstream investments align tightly with global market dynamics.
For more information, visit www.PlatinumGroupMetals.net.
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