Australia's opportunity to become an Asia–Pacific AI compute hub
McKinsey
· April 15, 2026
· ✓ verified
McKinsey outlines that Australia could become an Asia–Pacific center for digital infrastructure if it expands compute capacity to 5.0 GW by 2030, which would require up to AU $190 billion of new capital investment.
- Main announcement/action: McKinsey projects that increasing Australia’s compute capacity from 1.5 GW to 5.0 GW by 2030 would need up to AU $190 billion in digital infrastructure investment and could generate approximately AU $80 billion in additional GDP annually from 2030 and support ~100,000 new jobs across construction, operations, and supply chains. The analysis specifies a target timeline to 2030 and quantifies capacity (GW), investment (AU $), GDP uplift (AU $), and job counts.
- Background and key constraints/details: The article frames the recommendation through evidence on demand shifts and regional spillover: Australia’s current compute share ~1.8%, projected domestic demand to 3.9 GW by 2030 (or 5.0 GW with regional capture). It highlights principal constraints—grid connection delays (2–3 years in key locations), higher energy and labor costs (business electricity ~56% above APAC average; construction labor ~159% above regional average), and competition from peers (e.g., Malaysia, Thailand, Singapore) and outlines four priority action areas: regulation, innovative energy systems, skills pipelines, and long-term planning.