The five biggest names in tech are about to spend more on data centers in a single year than the entire GDP of Switzerland. Amazon, Microsoft, Alphabet, Meta, and Oracle are collectively projected to pour between $660 billion and $725 billion into capital expenditures in 2026, with roughly 75% of that earmarked for AI infrastructure.
The spending breakdown
Amazon leads the pack with projected 2026 capital expenditure approaching $200 billion. Microsoft trails closely at around $190 billion.
Alphabet sits in the $175 billion to $185 billion range. Meta’s tab is expected to land between $115 billion and $135 billion.
The money is flowing into dedicated data centers, powerful GPUs, custom-designed chips, advanced server architecture, and the power systems needed to keep all of it running.
The veteran recruitment angle isn’t just corporate social responsibility window dressing. Data centers require personnel with discipline, technical aptitude, and the ability to manage complex systems under pressure. With the industry facing a genuine talent shortage as hundreds of new facilities come online, former service members represent a pipeline that actually makes strategic sense.
The energy collision course with crypto
These AI data centers are projected to consume over 1,000 terawatt-hours of electricity globally by 2026. For context, Bitcoin mining’s estimated annual consumption sits at roughly 120 to 138 TWh.
That means AI infrastructure is about to consume roughly seven to eight times more electricity than the entire Bitcoin network.
The practical implications are immediate. AI data centers and Bitcoin mining operations often compete for the same resources: cheap electricity, favorable climates for cooling, and regulatory environments that welcome large-scale power consumers. As tech giants lock up energy contracts and grid capacity, miners could find themselves squeezed out of previously attractive locations.
Some Bitcoin mining companies have already started pivoting. Firms like Core Scientific and Hut 8 have been converting or leasing data center capacity to AI workloads, recognizing that the margins on AI compute can exceed those on Bitcoin mining.
What this means for crypto investors
The most obvious impact is on publicly traded Bitcoin miners. Companies that own significant real estate and power infrastructure near data center hubs may find themselves acquisition targets or lucrative partners for tech giants hungry for capacity.
When you add 1,000 TWh of new electricity demand to a global grid that’s already strained, prices go up. Higher energy costs compress margins for proof-of-work mining across every geography. This could further accelerate the market’s gravitational pull toward miners with access to stranded energy, renewables, or flared natural gas.
Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy.

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