News
30 June 2026

Infrastructure Under Pressure

How climate change, rising temperatures and AI are reshaping the future of enterprise infrastructure.

Enterprise infrastructure is entering a new operating environment.

For decades, organisations designed IT infrastructure around assumptions that remained largely unchanged. Seasonal weather patterns were predictable; cooling systems operated within expected tolerances and the environmental conditions surrounding enterprise technology rarely featured in strategic planning.

Today, those assumptions are being challenged.

Across the United Kingdom and Europe, extreme heat events are increasing in frequency, duration and intensity. Temperatures once considered exceptional are becoming more common, placing additional pressure on power networks, cooling systems, transport infrastructure and the digital services that modern organisations rely upon every day.

At the same time, enterprise technology is becoming significantly more demanding. Cloud adoption, edge computing, artificial intelligence and increasingly data-intensive applications are driving unprecedented levels of computational power. Every additional workload generates heat. Every additional rack consumes energy. Every additional service increases the importance of resilient infrastructure.

Thermometer in front of cars and traffic during heatwave in the UK.

The convergence of these environmental and technological trends creates a challenge that extends beyond the data centre. It affects operational continuity, business resilience, financial performance and long-term strategic planning.

Organisations that continue to rely on infrastructure designed for yesterday’s conditions The purpose of this publication is not to predict the future, but to help organisations prepare for it may find it increasingly difficult to maintain availability, efficiency and resilience in tomorrow’s operating environment.

Why this matters?

  • Climate change is becoming an operational risk, not just an environmental issue.
  • Artificial intelligence and high-performance computing are increasing power consumption and cooling requirements.
  • Legacy server rooms and ageing infrastructure face growing resilience challenges.
  • Modern infrastructure strategies must balance availability, sustainability and operational efficiency.
  • Organisations that invest in resilience today will be better positioned to reduce operational risk, protect critical services and adapt to future demands.

FIVE KEY FINDINGS

1. Climate is no longer a future risk – it is a present-day operational reality.

Extreme heat is no longer an isolated event. Across the UK and Europe, temperatures are breaking long-standing records with increasing frequency. Infrastructure designed around historical climate conditions is now being exposed to operating environments it was never intended to withstand.

2. Enterprise infrastructure is becoming more vulnerable.

Servers, storage arrays, networking equipment and communication systems all generate heat. As ambient temperatures rise, cooling systems work harder, energy consumption increases and hardware operates closer to its design limits. This increases operational costs while reducing resilience.

3. Artificial intelligence is accelerating the challenge.

AI is transforming business, but it is also transforming infrastructure requirements. Modern AI workloads demand significantly more computing power than traditional enterprise applications, generating greater heat densities and placing additional pressure on power distribution and cooling systems.

4. Resilience has become a competitive advantage.

Business continuity is no longer solely about disaster recovery. Organisations must ensure their infrastructure can continue operating during prolonged heatwaves, power constraints and increasingly unpredictable environmental conditions. Those that invest early in resilience will be better positioned to maintain service availability and customer confidence.

5. The organisations that adapt first will be best prepared for tomorrow.

Climate resilience should not be viewed as a standalone sustainability initiative. It is now a strategic business consideration that influences operational efficiency, financial performance, regulatory preparedness and long-term competitiveness. Infrastructure decisions made today will determine how effectively organisations respond to tomorrow’s challenges.

CASE STUDY – JUNE 2026: A WAKE-UP CALL FOR EUROPE

Across Europe, the summer of 2026 demonstrated how quickly extreme weather can place pressure on infrastructure.

Data Centres feel the heat

Rising external temperature directly increase the load on data centre infrastructure.

  • 35°C+ Outside air temperatures – Modern data centres are design for world average temperature around 5-12°C.
  • 30 – 40% More cooling energy – For every 1°C increase above design conditions, cooling energy can rise significantly.
  • 24/7 Systems under constant pressure – Cooling systems must work harder for longer, increasing wear and risk of failure.
  • Higher risk of outages – Extreme heat increases the likelihood of thermal incidents and service disruption.

More resilient future?

More organisations are choosing to outsource. It provides access to expertise, technology and resilience at scale. The most forward-thinking organisations are taking action now, trying a smarter way to build a more resilient future.

  • Asses risks – Understand climate and infrastructure exposures
  • Strenthen resilience – Invest in infrastructure designed for a changing climate
  • Optimise efficiency – Reduce energy use and improve sustainability
  • Ensure continuity – Build systems that can withstand extreme conditions
  • Future- proof strategy – Make infrastructure a soure of long-term advantage

What does resilient infrastructure actually look like?

Resilience isn’t achieved by adding another tool or replacing a single server.

It comes from designing IT as a connected ecosystem – where infrastructure, cloud, networking, communications, and security work together, not as isolated technologies.

Organizations preparing for this new operating reality are increasingly focusing on:

  • building hybrid and distributed architectures that reduce single points of failure
  • improving visibility across their entire infrastructure through monitoring and automation
  • modernizing legacy environments to improve efficiency and resilience
  • strengthening business continuity with tested recovery and failover capabilities
  • simplifying operations by integrating technologies rather than adding complexity

The objective isn’t to eliminate disruption. It’s to ensure the business can continue operating when disruption occurs

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