Into this moment of escalating demand for AI Data Centers, the world's deserts have announced themselves as a serious answer. Not in spite of their harshness, but in many ways because of it. The same relentless sun that bakes the Sahara, the Arabian Peninsula, the Atacama, and the Australian Outback is also the most abundant, most consistent, and increasingly the cheapest source of electricity on Earth. Land that costs almost nothing, needs no permits, spreads for thousands of miles, and sits far from the political complications of dense cities suddenly looks like a strategic asset. And the geopolitical logic, the engineering possibility, and the economic arithmetic are converging fast. This book is about that convergence. It examines the proposition - now being acted on by Microsoft, Google, Saudi Arabia, Morocco, India, and a growing roster of sovereign wealth funds and hyperscale operators - that the future of artificial intelligence will be built not in the cloud-streaked hills of the Pacific Northwest or the rainy suburbs of European capitals, but in the sun-scorched emptiness of the world's great desert regions. It asks not just whether this is technically possible, but what it means for the communities in those deserts, for the water supplies those regions depend on, for the global balance of technological power, and for the climate whose fate is tied to where and how AI's voracious appetite for electricity is fed.
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