NOW LET US – AI RAG SaaS Studio TP.HCM
NOW LET US
Digital Product Studio
Back to news
AI-FRONTIER...1 min read

Nvidia says its AI data center design runs hotter to use a lot less water

Share
NOW LET US Article – Nvidia says its AI data center design runs hotter to use a lot less water

By switching to 100 percent liquid cooling and running servers hotter, Nvidia claims it can cut water use to “near zero.”

Public pushback against data centers has emphasized their water and energy consumption, and now Nvidia is highlighting its claim that the Rubin generation reference design for a fully liquid-cooled data center has “eliminated massive amounts of power usage and pretty much all water usage.” Still, it doesn’t address all of the concerns around AI data centers, including during their construction, and for the power generation requirements of the massive facilities. Also, as Gizmodo points out, Nvidia’s blog post doesn’t mention the cost of building this style of data center vs. one using less efficient air cooling, but claims that “every cloud provider and data center operator building for [Rubin] is making the transition.”

Nvidia says its AI data center design runs hotter to use a lot less water

By switching to 100 percent liquid cooling and running servers hotter, Nvidia claims it can cut water use to “near zero.”

By switching to 100 percent liquid cooling and running servers hotter, Nvidia claims it can cut water use to “near zero.”

The efficiency gains are partly due to running AI servers hotter, as high as 113 degrees Fahrenheit (45 degrees Celsius). In a recent report, Amazon similarly touted higher heat tolerances as part of making its mostly air-cooled data centers more efficient.

With Nvidia’s system, “heat is captured directly at the chip and transported through liquid loops operating at much higher temperatures, allowing outdoor dry coolers to reject heat efficiently for much of the year,” with much more flexibility when it comes to the ambient air temperature.

According to Nvidia’s head of sustainability, Josh Parker, the reference design takes water use “from roughly 2.6 million gallons per megawatt per year for conventional cooling-tower-based systems to near zero — up to a 100 percent reduction.”

© 2026 Now Let Us. All rights reserved.

Source: The Verge AI

Advertisement
Ad slot ready: 5887729102

More in this category

NOW LET US Related – AI is cursing renters with the promise of impossible homes

ai-frontier

AI is cursing renters with the promise of impossible homes

Virtual staging powered by generative AI is making it easier than ever for real estate brokers to create misleading listings, leaving renters to navigate a minefield of impossible homes.

NOW LET US Related – OpenAI Launches Full-Scale Effort to Patch Open-Source Bugs as It Takes on Anthropic’s Mythos

ai-frontier

OpenAI Launches Full-Scale Effort to Patch Open-Source Bugs as It Takes on Anthropic’s Mythos

As fears about AI hacking capabilities grow, OpenAI has launched a series of cybersecurity initiatives, including the 'Patch the Planet' project to secure open-source software and an upgraded GPT-5.5-Cyber model, directly competing with Anthropic's Mythos 5.

NOW LET US Related – Read this before you vibe-code another app

ai-frontier

Read this before you vibe-code another app

Your dream vibe-coded app might be a security nightmare. While AI makes building software easier than ever, securing it remains a massive challenge.

NOW LET US Related – Patch the Planet: a Daybreak initiative to support open source maintainers

ai-frontier

Patch the Planet: a Daybreak initiative to support open source maintainers

Daybreak introduces Patch the Planet, an initiative built with Trail of Bits to help open-source maintainers secure critical software using AI-assisted research and expert human review.

NOW LET US Related – World Cup Scams Are Getting Harder to Spot

ai-frontier

World Cup Scams Are Getting Harder to Spot

With the 2026 FIFA World Cup approaching, cybercriminals are leveraging AI to create highly sophisticated scams, making traditional warning signs obsolete. Experts warn of a massive surge in fraudulent domains, fake tickets, and targeted phishing campaigns.

NOW LET US Related – Some Electricians Think Building Data Centers Is for Sellouts

ai-frontier

Some Electricians Think Building Data Centers Is for Sellouts

As Big Tech pours billions into data centers for the AI boom, electricians are facing an ethical dilemma. While some see it as a lucrative career path, others debate whether contributing to these massive projects makes them complicit in corporate greed and environmental harm.

EXPLORE TOPICS

Discover All Categories

Deep dive into the specific technology sectors that matter most to you.