A common myth suggests data centres can run on rooftop solar. In reality, on-site panels barely cover office lights. To power the actual IT load sustainably, South African operators use electricity wheeling. They invest in utility-scale wind and solar farms in the hinterlands, feed that energy into the national grid, and off-take an equivalent amount at the facility. Leading the charge, Teraco has committed a massive R2-billion to build its own 120MW utility-scale solar farm in the Free State, while competitors like ADC and Vantage are securing long-term power purchase agreements to buy diverse renewable supply. However, the renewables arithmetic is unforgiving. A 120MW solar plant does not equal 100% green power because the sun doesn’t always shine. Even massive utility-scale projects currently only cover roughly 30% to 50% of a facility’s total critical load. The paradox remains: while the industry is frantically building renewable capacity to offset its carbon footprint, the always-on demands of AI mean they must still balance these new green electrons with the steady, fossil-fuelled baseload of the national grid to ensure reliability. DM How datacentres work(Source: Daily Maverick)Industrial evolutionBecause the national grid can be unreliable, local infrastructure must be a customised blend of solar, batteries and huge back-up generators to keep to the uptime commitments. This brownfield strategy of gutting and converting existing industrial warehouses has turned specialised real estate into a high-stakes game, with single plots in Cape Town now fetching upwards of R550-million (what Africa Data Centres paid for its CPT-1 facility). As South Africa hosts more of these AI factories, the economics are shifting. Individual components like network switches are becoming 30% more efficient, but our demand for AI processing keeps total energy consumption climbing. The goal is a delicate balance: securing permits, wheeling renewable power to offset coal and managing water with clinical obsession Post navigation Inside the Paarl solar panel plant trading on local agility to challenge imported panels Five economic and business factors to watch for SA in 2026