Siemens and Delta Partner to Accelerate Data Center Deployment and Reduce Costs and Carbon Emissions

Siemens Smart Infrastructure and Delta have announced a global partnership to deliver prefabricated, modular power solutions that can shorten data center deployment times by up to 50%. The plug-and-play systems are manufactured and tested off-site, reducing construction risks and enabling significantly faster commissioning. The optimized design can lower CAPEX by up to 20% and cut carbon emissions by up to 27% by using less concrete and maximizing available floor space. The partnership combines Siemens’ expertise in electrical power distribution and engineering with Delta’s high-efficiency UPS systems, batteries, and advanced thermal management technologies designed for high-density AI workloads.

As digital demand continues to surge, data centers face mounting pressure from rising costs, tight timelines, and increasingly stringent sustainability requirements. The Siemens-Delta prefabricated power solutions help operators overcome these challenges and gain a strategic advantage in the global data center market. According to both companies, integrated SKID and eHouse modules provide standardized, scalable, and highly reliable power infrastructure for hyperscale and colocation operators.

Jimmy Yiin, Executive Vice President of Global Business Operations at Delta Electronics, said: “Delta is fully committed to energy efficiency. Our expertise ‘from grid to chip’ enables us to architect solutions for extreme AI-era demands, and partnering with Siemens allows us to expand the global reach of our energy-saving technologies.”

Stephan May, CEO of Electrification & Automation at Siemens Smart Infrastructure, stated: “By combining Siemens’ advanced power distribution with Delta’s high-efficiency UPS, battery, and cooling portfolios, we are delivering a prefabricated solution that can cut time-to-market by half while boosting energy efficiency and lowering risk.”

Advait Sukhtankar, Vice President of Electrification & Automation at Siemens, added: “The standardization of modular power systems is becoming essential for the AI era — giving operators the speed, reliability, and efficiency that traditional approaches can no longer deliver.”

Designed with full Building Information Modeling (BIM) integration, the solutions include a digital twin for faster installation, simplified troubleshooting, and optimized energy performance throughout the entire lifecycle. Siemens notes that this partnership-driven approach connects key industry players and promotes the interoperability needed to address the world’s most significant infrastructure challenges.

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