The race to develop artificial intelligence has pushed governments and technology giants to build new electricity plants and upgrade their decades-old grid networks, creating significant opportunities for Chinese power equipment companies, according to analysts.
Chinese firms have been benefiting from the spillover of a US order boom, which was driven by US President Donald Trump’s push for tech leaders like Meta and SoftBank to invest in AI infrastructure.
“The US buys products from Japan and South Korea instead of China amid geopolitical tensions,” said Pierre Lau Hin-tat, China equity strategist and head of Asian utilities and clean energy research at Citigroup Global Markets. “Now the pipeline for Japanese and Korean firms is as long as three years, so companies from emerging markets turn to mainland suppliers.”
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Lau added that the upcycle for Chinese suppliers would be sustained “as long as Trump remains the person in charge”.
The US may face a power shortfall of up to 20 per cent from data centres alone until 2028, according to estimates. Photo: AFP alt=The US may face a power shortfall of up to 20 per cent from data centres alone until 2028, according to estimates. Photo: AFP>
China exported US$7.3 billion worth of transformers and US$4.3 billion worth of high-voltage gas-insulated switchgears (GIS) in the first 10 months of the year, up 37.8 per cent and 28.5 per cent, respectively, from a year earlier. That compares with a 5.3 per cent rise in overall outbound shipments.
Transformers are critical components for transmitting electricity remotely and efficiently, while GIS offers safer solutions to manage electricity and support the integration of volatile power generated by wind and solar energy.
Thanks to strong overseas demand, power transmission and distribution equipment giant Sieyuan Electric, for example, saw its revenue jump about 33 per cent and its net profit soar 47 per cent for the first nine months of the year compared with a year earlier. The Shenzhen-listed company’s exports already surpassed domestic sales in the first half.
Looking ahead, JPMorgan Chase said leading Chinese power equipment makers, together with their Asian peers, could continue to expand in developed markets over a long cycle.
The US, in particular, could face a shortfall of up to 20 per cent from data centres alone until 2028, according to Morgan Stanley’s estimates.
finance.yahoo.com
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