Construction of China's first LNG intelligent computing centre project has begun in Zhuhai of Guangdong province, the local government said on 3 March, with the aim to utilise LNG cold energy for cooling.
Intelligent computing power is key to advancing artificial intelligence (AI) technology. But the huge energy consumption of computing power centres has been limiting its development.
The LNG intelligent computing centre can reduce electricity consumption needed for cooling by more than 50pc compared with traditional intelligent computing centres. This greatly reduces operating costs and carbon emissions.
The Zhuhai LNG Intelligent Computing Centre plans to build 1 exaFLOP — a unit used to measure how fast a computer can perform floating-point operations — of intellectual computing power, with the first half expected to be put into operation by the third quarter of 2025.
China's intelligent computing power hit 725.3 exaFLOPS in 2024, an increase of 74pc from 2023. The country's intelligent computing power is expected to reach 1,037.3 exaFLOPS in 2025, up by 43pc from 2024, the Chinese People's Government said on 17 February.
This is another new field of cold energy utilisation in China after the use of LNG cold energy for power generation. Chinese state-owned refiner CNOOC plans to build cryogenic or cold energy power generation plants at its 3mn t/yr Jiangsu, 6mn t/yr Zhejiang, 6.8mn t/yr Dapeng and 3.5mn t/yr Zhuhai terminals. The total power generation capacity of these projects is projected at about 100mn kWh/yr, the firm said in June 2023. But the company did not provide a specific timeline.

