Industry: Energy & Utilities
The global energy and utilities sector is in the midst of its most consequential transformation since the post-war buildout of national grids — driven by the unprecedented electricity demand growth from AI data centers, a nuclear power renaissance unlike anything seen in four decades, and a parallel transition in transportation fuels as alternatives to traditional LPG and petroleum products gain ground in specific applications.
The nuclear renaissance and Small Modular Reactors
The global nuclear energy renaissance and Small Modular Reactor (SMR) market, valued at approximately USD 120 billion in 2025 and forecast to grow at a 9.5% CAGR to USD 206.9 billion by 2031, represents one of the most dramatic policy and investment reversals in the energy sector's recent history. After decades of stagnation following the Fukushima accident's chilling effect on Western nuclear programs, the convergence of three forces — AI data center power demand requiring firm, 24/7 carbon-free generation at a scale renewables alone cannot reliably provide; energy security concerns following the European gas supply crisis; and genuine technological maturation of SMR designs — has catalyzed a wave of new reactor construction commitments. The AI Data Centre & High-Reliability C&I Power application segment is the fastest-growing within this market, expanding at a 21.6% CAGR as hyperscalers including Microsoft, Google, and Amazon pursue direct power purchase agreements with both restarted legacy reactors (such as the Three Mile Island Unit 1 restart) and emerging SMR developers (X-energy, NuScale, Kairos Power, TerraPower).
Regionally, Asia-Pacific represents both the largest (42% share) and fastest-growing (11.2% CAGR) regional nuclear market, with China's domestic buildout program continuing at an unmatched pace, India scaling toward an ambitious long-term capacity target, and Japan's gradual return to nuclear generation through reactor restarts. Competitively, Rosatom continues to lead global project volume through international deployments, Westinghouse's AP1000 program in Poland represents a major Western entry into Central European nuclear markets, and China's CGN/CNNC are expanding technology export partnerships across Asia, Africa, and parts of Europe.
AI data center power demand: the binding constraint
As discussed in the Construction & Real Estate category, AI data center development has become constrained primarily by power availability rather than land, equipment, or even capital. Utilities in regions with significant data center development — Virginia, Texas, Ireland, and increasingly Malaysia, the UAE, and India — are navigating unprecedented interconnection queue growth, with some utilities reporting data center interconnection requests that would, if all approved, multiply regional electricity demand several-fold over a decade. This has driven renewed utility interest in "behind-the-meter" generation arrangements, where data center developers fund dedicated generation capacity (including SMRs, gas turbines, and large-scale battery storage) rather than relying solely on grid interconnection, alongside grid-scale transmission investment that in many cases faces multi-year permitting timelines that are themselves becoming a constraint on AI infrastructure buildout pace.
LPG alternatives and the cooking/heating fuel transition
The global LPG alternatives market reflects a more incremental but steadily growing transition in residential and commercial cooking and heating fuels, driven by a combination of decarbonization policy (particularly in Europe, where natural gas boiler phase-out policies are accelerating heat pump adoption) and, in emerging markets, electrification of cooking as grid access expands and clean cooking initiatives (supported by organizations including the Clean Cooking Alliance) seek to displace traditional biomass and LPG use in regions where indoor air pollution from cooking fuels represents a significant public health burden. Bio-LPG (produced from renewable feedstocks) and dimethyl ether (DME) blends represent transitional alternatives that can leverage existing LPG distribution infrastructure while reducing lifecycle emissions, appealing to markets where full electrification of cooking/heating faces grid capacity or cost constraints.
Grid modernization and storage
Beyond generation, grid infrastructure itself requires substantial modernization to accommodate both the bidirectional power flows created by distributed renewable generation and electric vehicle charging, and the sheer load growth from data centers and electrification of transport and heating. Grid-scale battery storage continues to scale rapidly, increasingly serving not just renewable integration (smoothing solar/wind variability) but also as a faster-to-deploy alternative to transmission upgrades in constrained grid areas, and as a revenue-generating asset participating in increasingly sophisticated electricity market structures including capacity markets and ancillary services markets.
Regional dynamics
Europe continues to navigate the aftermath of its energy security crisis with a dual-track approach: accelerated renewable deployment alongside, in several countries, renewed openness to nuclear power that would have been politically unthinkable a decade ago. The Middle East, traditionally an oil and gas exporting region, is increasingly investing in both renewable energy (driven by domestic decarbonization goals and a desire to preserve hydrocarbon exports rather than burn them domestically for power) and nuclear power (UAE's Barakah plant fully operational, with Saudi Arabia advancing its own nuclear program).
Research intelligence sought by energy and utilities enterprise buyers
Buyers of energy and utilities market research typically require: SMR technology and deployment pipeline tracking by developer and region; AI data center power demand forecasting and grid interconnection queue analysis; LPG alternatives adoption modeling by region and application; grid storage market sizing and revenue stream analysis; and nuclear fuel cycle supply chain assessment (uranium enrichment capacity, particularly given geopolitical considerations around Russian enrichment services).
All energy and utilities market research reports on this platform are produced by human analysts drawing on primary data from utility regulatory filings, company financial disclosures, government energy agency data, and grid operator interconnection queue data.