No available evidence shows that half of AI data centers have been permanently canceled. For the U.S., about 12 GW of 2026 data center capacity was expected, but only roughly one third was under active construction at the time of reporting [16].

Create a landscape editorial hero image for this Studio Global article: No, Half of AI Data Centers Haven’t Been Canceled. Here’s What the 2026 Data Shows. Article summary: There is no solid evidence that half of AI only data centers have been permanently canceled.. Topic tags: ai, data centers, ai infrastructure, energy, power grid. Reference image context from search candidates: Reference image 1: visual subject "The image features a timeline showing planned power generation capacity for various data centers, including Microsoft's Fayetteville, Meta's Prometheus, Amazon's New Carlisle, and" Reference image 2: visual subject "The chart illustrates the projected growth of the global AI-driven data center market from 2024 to 2034, with total capacity increasing from 14.3 billion USD in 2024 to an estimate" Style: premium digital editorial illustration, source-backed research mood, clean c
A sharp version of the story has been circulating online: “50% of AI data centers” have been canceled or delayed [11]. The sourced data points to a more careful conclusion: a large share of 2026 data-center capacity is at risk of slipping, but the evidence does not show that half of AI data centers have been permanently canceled [
7][
16].
The best-supported version of the claim is about schedule risk, not confirmed cancellations. Latitude Media, citing Sightline Climate research, reported that 30%–50% of large data centers scheduled to come online in 2026 were expected to be delayed because of power constraints, equipment shortages, and local opposition [7].
U.S.-focused reporting tells a similar story. Yahoo Finance reported that roughly 12 GW of U.S. data-center capacity was expected to come online in 2026, but only about one-third of that capacity was under active construction at the time of reporting [16]. Tom’s Hardware also described close to half of planned U.S. data-center builds as projected to be delayed or canceled, citing constraints in electrical components such as transformers, switchgear, and batteries .
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No available evidence shows that half of AI data centers have been permanently canceled.
No available evidence shows that half of AI data centers have been permanently canceled. For the U.S., about 12 GW of 2026 data center capacity was expected, but only roughly one third was under active construction at the time of reporting [16].
The key caveat: many reports combine “delayed or canceled,” and some figures measure gigawatts of capacity rather than a simple count of buildings [4][7][16].
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People on the ground report otherwise, though. Construction executives report that the building sites are lacking in specialist workers like electricians and pipe fitters, an issue that has been reported since late 2025. Note that OpenAI’s data center proje...
That is a serious bottleneck. It is not the same as proving that half of AI data centers have already been canceled.
The 50% figure appears to combine several related but different claims. One widely shared online framing uses the phrase “cancelled or delayed” in its title [11]. More concrete reporting points to two underlying data points:
Those numbers support concern about the 2026 buildout. They do not support the simpler claim that half of AI data centers have disappeared from the pipeline.
Several reports use a combined category: delayed or canceled [1][
4][
16]. That wording matters. A delayed project can slip into 2027 or later and still be built. A canceled project is removed from the pipeline. If the data does not separate the two outcomes, the safer conclusion is that many projects are at risk of delay, not that they have all been abandoned.
Some of the most important figures are measured in gigawatts of capacity, not a simple count of facilities. Latitude Media reported at least 16 GW of global capacity planned for 2026, with only 5 GW already under construction [7]. Yahoo Finance reported roughly 12 GW expected in the U.S. in 2026, with about one-third under active construction [
16].
That distinction matters because a few very large campuses can represent a large share of total capacity. “Half of capacity at risk” does not automatically mean “half of buildings canceled.”
The AI boom is clearly part of the story: multiple reports frame these delays around the rapid expansion of AI infrastructure [4][
14][
15]. But the quantified Sightline-related figures cited here generally refer to large data centers or data-center capacity, not a separately audited list of facilities used only for AI workloads [
7][
16].
Power is the clearest bottleneck. Latitude Media reported that a quarter of 140 tracked projects had not disclosed how they planned to be powered, and that it typically takes more than a year to energize a data center after construction begins [7]. That makes 2026 opening targets difficult for projects that are not already far along.
Reports repeatedly point to shortages of transformers, switchgear, batteries, and related power-chain equipment [4][
14][
16]. Yahoo Finance noted that electrical infrastructure may account for less than 10% of a data center’s total cost, but a delay in any single part of the power chain can halt the entire project [
16].
Construction constraints are not only about hardware. Tom’s Hardware reported that construction executives have pointed to shortages of specialist workers, including electricians and pipe fitters, at data-center sites [3]. Other reports cite supply shortages and reliance on imported components from China as factors behind delays or cancellations [
4][
5]. Latitude Media’s Sightline-based summary also lists local opposition alongside power and equipment constraints [
7].
The evidence does not show that AI compute demand has vanished. It shows that the physical layer of the AI boom is harder to deliver than the financing announcements suggest. Developers still need power agreements, grid equipment, construction labor, and local acceptance before new capacity can come online [3][
4][
7][
16].
That makes 2026 a stress test for AI infrastructure. Projects with active construction and credible power plans are in a stronger position; projects without disclosed power arrangements or construction progress are more exposed to schedule slips [7][
16]. Some may ultimately be canceled, but the available reporting supports delay risk more clearly than mass cancellation.
Before accepting a 50% cancellation claim, check five details:
Those details determine whether a headline is describing a true cancellation, a missed opening date, a power-procurement problem, a supply-chain bottleneck, or local resistance.
“Half of AI data centers have been canceled” is an overstatement. The real story is still significant: 30%–50% of large data centers scheduled for 2026 may be delayed globally, and only about one-third of expected U.S. 2026 capacity was under active construction at the time of reporting [7][
16]. The AI infrastructure boom is not necessarily collapsing, but its 2026 delivery schedule is under real pressure.
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