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HomeDaily NewsThursday, May 28, 2026Cooling the AI Surge: Building Sustainable Liquid-Cooled Data Centres for Next-Gen Workloads - May 2026
Business & Economy3 stories from 1 sources

Cooling the AI Surge: Building Sustainable Liquid-Cooled Data Centres for Next-Gen Workloads - May 2026

The increasing demand from AI workloads is pushing data centres beyond the capabilities of traditional air cooling, necessitating the adoption of liquid cooling for energy efficiency and performance. According to Symphrose Ochieng from Schneider Electric, digitising East Africa's energy sector requires a foundational focus on strengthening existing infrastructure before layering in smart technologies. These stories highlight the critical infrastructure prerequisites for technological advancement in East Africa, emphasizing that digital transformation cannot succeed without reliable power foundations.

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Thursday 1:36 AMCapital BusinessFirst

Cooling the AI surge: building sustainable liquid-cooled data centres for next-gen workloads

Cooling the AI surge: building sustainable liquid-cooled data centres for next-gen workloads

The increasing demand from AI workloads is pushing data centres beyond the capabilities of traditional air cooling, necessitating the adoption of liquid cooling for energy efficiency and performance.

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Key Highlights

The increasing demand from AI workloads is pushing data centres beyond the capabilities of traditional air cooling, necessitating the adoption of liquid cooling for energy efficiency and performance.

  • Direct to chip liquid cooling is up to 3,000 times more effective than air cooling, potentially reducing energy use by 30-60%.
  • Schneider Electric, represented by Steven Santini, Vice President, Secure Power for Sub-Saharan Africa, highlights the critical role of liquid cooling in future-ready data centres.
  • Data centres could account for 3% of global electricity consumption by 2030, with AI driving significant growth in heat generation and energy demand.
Thursday 1:49 AMCapital Business

You can’t digitise a blackout

You can’t digitise a blackout

According to Symphrose Ochieng, Infrastructure Segment & Power Systems Business Leader at Schneider Electric, digitising East Africa's energy sector requires a foundational focus on strengthening existing infrastructure before layering in smart technologies.

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Key Highlights

According to Symphrose Ochieng, Infrastructure Segment & Power Systems Business Leader at Schneider Electric, digitising East Africa's energy sector requires a foundational focus on strengthening existing infrastructure before layering in smart technologies.

  • Sub-Saharan Africa averages 15–20% energy losses, nearly double the global average.
  • A dual focus on strengthening infrastructure and progressively adding digital capabilities is essential for a successful energy transition.
  • Digitisation risks being a misplaced priority if basic infrastructure gaps, such as ageing networks and limited rural electrification impacting 140 million people without electricity in East Africa, are not addressed first.
Thursday 11:53 AMCapital Business

Motorists to Receive Traffic Fines via SMS, Email Under New NTSA Enforcement System

Motorists to Receive Traffic Fines via SMS, Email Under New NTSA Enforcement System

Kenya is set to revolutionize traffic fine delivery with a new digital enforcement system, allowing motorists to receive official notifications via SMS and email starting June 1, 2026.

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Key Highlights

Kenya is set to revolutionize traffic fine delivery with a new digital enforcement system, allowing motorists to receive official notifications via SMS and email starting June 1, 2026.

  • Motorists will receive a Police Notification of Traffic Offence detailing violations, evidence, penalties, and payment instructions.
  • The system, developed by the National Transport and Safety Authority (NTSA) in collaboration with other key government agencies, aims to reduce court congestion and improve compliance.
  • Offenders will have the option to pay fines electronically or challenge allegations in court, with courts retaining discretion over penalties and demerit points.
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