- hyperscale data centres
- renewable energy
- subsea internet connectivity
- industrial cooling systems
- export-oriented cloud services
- AI startups
- semiconductor design firms
- research universities
Instead of exporting raw electricity through inefficient pricing structures, Pakistan could export computational power.
That is a far more valuable commodity.
But What About The Transmission Problem?
Critics correctly point out that Pakistan’s transmission network remains constrained.
They are right.
However, this actually strengthens—not weakens—the case for regional AI clusters.
Large AI campuses are geographically concentrated.
Unlike residential consumers, hyperscale data centres can be located close to generation sources where transmission bottlenecks are less severe.
They also become anchor customers for grid modernization.
The Solar Revolution Changes Everything
Pakistan is already witnessing one of the fastest distributed solar adoption rates in the region.
Every rooftop that generates its own electricity reduces pressure on daytime demand.
Over time this changes the national load profile.
If managed intelligently, this creates new opportunities for industrial electricity consumption during periods of surplus generation.
Instead of viewing rooftop solar as a threat, policymakers should see it as part of a broader strategy where distributed generation and centralized AI infrastructure complement one another.
Learning From Global Markets
Many publicly listed companies originally focused on Bitcoin mining are now repositioning themselves around AI compute.
Why?
Because GPU infrastructure generates recurring enterprise revenue rather than depending solely on cryptocurrency prices.
Cloud computing contracts often extend over years.
AI inference demand continues to grow.
Training large language models requires enormous computational resources.
This produces a far more diversified business model.
Pakistan should learn from these shifts rather than repeating business models that others are already moving beyond.