2025 COMPUTEX Compal Unveils 'The Race is On' Strategy During Forum Session
May 23, 2025 | Compal Electronics Inc.Estimated reading time: 2 minutes
As AI models and computing density continue to grow at an exponential rate, the data center industry is entering a new era where cooling capacity has become the next competitive threshold. At the “AI in Action” forum during COMPUTEX 2025, Compal Electronics Inc., Alan Chang, Vice President of the Infrastructure Solutions Business Group, delivered a keynote titled “Data Center for the Next AI: The Race is On”, emphasizing that the challenge brought by AI has already surpassed traditional compute performance, and energy efficiency and thermal management are now the core battlefield for next-generation data centers.
According to McKinsey, global data center infrastructure investment is projected to exceed USD 7 trillion between 2025 and 2030, with more than USD 5 trillion directed toward AI-specific infrastructure. Amid this surge in demand, chip thermal design power (TDP) has climbed from 500W to beyond 1,000W, and rack-level power consumption could potentially exceed 150kW, posing unprecedented challenges for both cooling and energy allocation.
To address these demands, Compal showcased the evolutionary roadmap of its liquid cooling infrastructure. The presentation outlined the transition from traditional air cooling to single-phase liquid cooling, and projected the future development of two-phase cooling and immersion cooling. Looking ahead, Direct Liquid Cooling (DLC) is expected to advance beyond the system level toward integration at the chip and packaging level, forming a truly integrated “DLC on Silicon” thermal architecture to support the increasing thermal loads driven by large-scale AI models.
Industry research shows that cooling capacity has increased from approximately 1,000W with air cooling to over 3,000W with liquid cooling (IEA, C&W, 2024), providing the necessary thermal support for high-density AI workloads and large-scale generative model training.
In addition to technological innovation, Compal also emphasized its global manufacturing and service network as a critical foundation for AI infrastructure. The company currently operates data center platform manufacturing and support facilities in the United States, Taiwan, Vietnam, Mexico, and Poland, covering a full spectrum of applications from personal devices and edge nodes to high-performance and quantum computing, with capabilities for rapid deployment and flexible delivery.
As data sovereignty, cybersecurity, edge AI, and sustainability goals continue to shape the industry, data center architectures are rapidly shifting from centralized to decentralized models. Generative AI applications are expanding from the cloud to verticals such as smart cities, healthcare, telecommunications, and finance, placing higher demands on real-time inference and local energy optimization at the edge. Leveraging its advantages in liquid cooling, server platforms, and global deployment, Compal helps customers build next-generation AI infrastructure with scalability and flexibility.
Alan Chang concluded, “AI is redefining the rules of competition for data centers. Compal is not just a hardware provider but a strategic partner advancing both energy efficiency and compute performance. Compute is a race of speed, but cooling is a race of endurance.”
The evolution of AI technology is driving data centers into a new generation. Compal not only demonstrates forward-looking deployment in hardware design and thermal management, but also adopts a system-level approach to address the key challenges of compute density, energy efficiency, and sustainable development. Through liquid cooling architecture, smart control integration, and global supply chain synergy, Compal is working hand in hand with its customers to build a new generation of AI data centers that are built to last and ready to scale—moving toward a future of intelligent computing and sustainability.
Testimonial
"In a year when every marketing dollar mattered, I chose to keep I-Connect007 in our 2025 plan. Their commitment to high-quality, insightful content aligns with Koh Young’s values and helps readers navigate a changing industry. "
Brent Fischthal - Koh YoungSuggested Items
Webinar Review, Part 2: Building the AI Backbone at IBM on Systems-level Packaging
04/20/2026 | Marcy LaRont, I-Connect007The second presentation in a recent Global Electronics Association’s Executive Pulse webinar series widened the lens on advanced packaging, moving beyond the component level to a systems-level view of how AI is reshaping the electronics landscape. Building on Dr. Hemanth Dhavaleswarupu of AMD’s previous discussion of chip-level packaging innovation, Dr. Jung Yoon of IBM explored the broader infrastructure implications, from the data center floor to the global supply chain.
MHI Unveils 'DIAVAULT,' a Secure, High Performance Edge Data Center Platform
02/25/2026 | JCN NewswireMitsubishi Heavy Industries, Ltd. (MHI) announced the launch of DIAVAULT, a newly developed industrial grade edge data center brand.
Boyd Doubles Liquid Cooling Capacity in Mexico for AI and Data Centers
02/18/2026 | BUSINESS WIREBoyd is excited to announce its growing capacity for AI data center liquid cooling system production with the expansion of its design and manufacturing facility in Juarez, Mexico.
Boeing Delivers B-52 with New Radar to U.S. Air Force for Testing
12/19/2025 | BoeingBoeing has delivered the first B-52 Radar Modernization Program (RMP) flight test aircraft to the U.S. Air Force for testing with the 412th Test Wing at Edwards Air Force Base in California.
Altus Reports Growing Demand for Guidance on Convection Reflow Oven Specification
12/10/2025 | Altus GroupAltus Group, a leading distributor of electronics manufacturing equipment in the UK and Ireland, has reported a rise in enquiries from manufacturers looking for guidance on specifying convection reflow ovens for SMT production lines.