ArrowArtboardCreated with Sketch.Title ChevronTitle ChevronIcon FacebookIcon LinkedinIcon Mail ContactPath LayerIcon MailPositive ArrowIcon Print
Generative AI is trained on a massive amount of data through graphic processing units and depends on power-hungry data centerswith large-capacity servers.
Datawatch

AI investment boom extends to nuclear power generation and uranium

Servers to support tech's data appetite will increasingly run on atomic energy

SHINICHI ARAKAWA and RYOSUKE HANAFUSA, Nikkei staff writers | Japan

TOKYO/HOUSTON -- Investors who have flocked to semiconductor stocks on the back of the generative artificial intelligence (AI) boom are starting to buy shares linked to nuclear power generation and its primary fuel uranium.

Prices of uranium have jumped some 70% over the past year, outpacing rises in the benchmark chip stock index during the same period. This reflects investor expectations that nuclear power-related companies will benefit from an explosive increase in electricity demand resulting from the widespread generative AI use, which requires vast amounts of data to learn and train.

Sponsored Content

About Sponsored Content This content was commissioned by Nikkei's Global Business Bureau.

Nikkei Asian Review, now known as Nikkei Asia, will be the voice of the Asian Century.

Celebrate our next chapter
Free access for everyone - Sep. 30

Find out more