Land, Memory, and Power Are Now Scarcer Than Chips
Three distinct supply-side crises are converging to cap the effective deployment rate of AI infrastructure regardless of how much capital is committed. SK Hynix's HBM capacity has reached zero, with customers so desperate they are offering to purchase EUV machines and co-fund fab lines directly — a distortion of normal supplier-customer relationships that reveals how severely AI training workloads have exhausted advanced memory supply chains. Even with customer financing, ASML's constrained EUV production pipeline means new HBM capacity cannot come online quickly enough to relieve pressure on Nvidia Blackwell deployments. Memory, not logic chips, is now the binding hardware constraint.
Simultaneously, 69 US jurisdictions have enacted data centre construction bans or moratoriums — four permanent — compressing viable buildout geography and creating pricing premiums and grid stress in the remaining permissible states. The Three Mile Island nuclear restart targeting mid-2027 is a direct response: nuclear offers a politically defensible power source when both new gas generation and grid interconnection face opposition. Taken together, these physical constraints — memory, land, and power — represent a class of problem that multi-billion-dollar capex commitments and hyperscaler balance sheets cannot simply override. Strategic advantage will accrue to operators who secured permissible sites, long-term power agreements, and memory supply commitments earliest.