North America
Inventory continues to climb, with Northern Virginia leading CBRE’s global rankings. It has 2,132 MW (2.1 GW) of supply, increasing 19.5% year-over-year from Q1 2022 to Q1 2023. Construction costs have generally increased but the Northern Virginia, Silicon Valley, Dallas/Ft. Worth and Chicago markets saw record MW under construction. Higher energy costs have also not materially slowed development, but power availability and bottlenecks are challenges. Local governments are working to address permitting and planning backlogs on transmission projects, particularly as utility companies aim to connect renewable energy to the grid.
Europe
Data center supply grew year-over-year in Frankfurt, London, Amsterdam and Paris (FLAP) as providers work to meet the strong demand across most top European markets. Continued significant data center development and select megaproject deliveries are expected this year, despite power availability issues. However, most new supply will be delivered in London and Frankfurt.
Latin America
There is 672 MW of inventory in Latin America as of Q1 2023, primarily across Brazil, Mexico, Chile and Colombia. The region has experienced significant growth over the past three years, with supply doubling since Q1 2020. Brazil has grown the fastest, with inventory up 127% from 2020 to 2022. It is also the largest, with around 67% of the region’s inventory.
Asia-Pacific
Data center inventory is growing rapidly across Asia-Pacific, achieving impressive scale. Tokyo, Sydney and Singapore each now contain over a half-GW of live power capacity. Sydney’s inventory jumped 30% year-over-year. Lack of power availability is a key emerging challenge facing operators in some Asia-Pacific markets. Overall, operators and investors are optimistic about the region’s potential and are expanding development to markets outside Tier 1 cities.
Source: CBRE Research, Q1 2022 & Q1 2023. Figures and data for North American markets include only wholesale colocation facilities. In Europe, Latin America, and Asia-Pacific, total inventory includes both wholesale and retail colocation facilities.