
From Cloud to GenAI, Hyperscalers Cement Role as Backbone of Global Infrastructure
Data center capacity is undergoing a major shift toward hyperscale operators, which now control 44 percent of global capacity, according to Synergy Research Group. Non-hyperscale colocations account for another 22 percent of capacity and is expected to continue, but hyperscalers projected to hold 61 percent of the capacity by 2030.
That swing also reflects the dominance of hyperscalers geographically. In a separate Synergy study revealing the world’s top 20 hyperscale data center locations, just 20 U.S. state or metro markets account for 62 percent of the world’s hyperscale capacity.
Northern Virginia and the Greater Beijing areas alone make up 20 percent of the total. They’re followed by the U.S. states of Oregon and Iowa, Dublin, the U.S. state of Ohio, Dallas, and then Shanghai. Of the top 20 markets, 14 are in the U.S., five in APAC region, and only one is in Europe.
This rapid shift is fueled by the explosive growth of cloud computing, artificial intelligence (AI), and especially generative AI (GenAI)—power-intensive technologies that demand the scale, efficiency, and specialized infrastructure only hyperscalers can deliver.
What’s Coming for Capacity
The capacity research shows on-premises data centers with 34 percent of the total capacity, a significant drop from the 56 percent capacity they accounted for just six years ago.
Synergy projects that by 2030, hyperscale operators such as Google Cloud, Amazon Web Services, and Microsoft Azure will claim 61 percent of all capacity, while on-premises share will drop to just 22 percent.
So, it appears on-premises data centers are both increasing and decreasing. That’s one way to put it, but it’s about perspective. Synergy’s capacity study indicates they’re growing as the volume of enterprise GPU servers increases. The shrinkage refers to share of the market: Hyperscalers are growing much faster than on-premises data centers, which is leading to a reduction in on-premises share of total data center capacity.
However, even though colocation and on-premises data centers will continue to lose share, they still will continue to grow. They just won’t be growing as fast as hyperscalers. So, it creates the illusion of shrinkage when it’s just slower growth.
In fact, after a sustained period of essentially no growth, on-premises data center capacity is receiving a boost thanks to GenAI applications and GPU infrastructure.