This article is brought to you by Melbourne Convention Bureau (MCB) supported by Business Events Australia.
As artificial intelligence accelerates global demand for compute, a parallel constraint is emerging with equal urgency: energy.
From hyperscale data centers to electrified industries, AI is driving a step change in electricity demand. This is not a future challenge, it is a present, system-level issue requiring coordinated action across energy, infrastructure, and engineering disciplines.
Around the world, the question is no longer whether AI will scale, but whether energy systems can scale with it.
Melbourne, Australia is moving beyond participation to become a globally connected leader helping define how these challenges are addressed.
A national challenge with global implications
Australia’s ambition to lead in artificial intelligence is sharpening focus on the infrastructure required to support it. Data centers are projected to account for up to 11 percent of the nation’s electricity consumption by 2035, placing increasing pressure on generation, transmission, and system reliability.
At the same time, insight from the IEEE Power and Energy Society (PES) highlights that meeting energy demand from AI and digital infrastructure is one of the most significant challenges facing engineers over the next decade.
The implications are clear. In addition to computing challenges, AI poses major energy systems challenges.
“As artificial intelligence continues to scale globally, the challenge is no longer just computational power, it is the energy systems required to support it” —Professor Thas (Ampalavanapillai) Nirmalathas, University of Melbourne
Why Melbourne is leading on the global stage
Victoria has developed one of the most advanced and integrated energy ecosystems in Australia and globally, spanning renewable generation, battery storage, grid modernization, and advanced materials.
What distinguishes Melbourne globally is how these capabilities are connected and applied at system scale.
The city brings together world class engineering research, a rapidly evolving clean energy sector, advanced digital infrastructure, and strong alignment between government, industry, and academia. This convergence is critical in the AI era, where energy, networks and computing systems must be designed together.
Victoria’s coordinated investment across these areas is positioning Melbourne not only as a national leader, but also as a reference point in the global energy system transformation.
Engineering the systems behind the AI economy
The challenge ahead is that generating more power won’t be enough, as engineers need to design systems that respond dynamically to new patterns of demand.
Three priorities are emerging globally:
- Aligning data center development with grid capacity and renewable supply
- Embedding flexibility through storage, demand response, and system optimization
- Balancing digital growth with decarbonization and long-term reliability
Addressing…
Read full article: How Melbourne AI Energy Systems Tackle Demand
The post “How Melbourne AI Energy Systems Tackle Demand” by Melbourne Convention Bureau was published on 07/01/2026 by spectrum.ieee.org




































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