The Permitting Nightmare
Here's an uncomfortable truth about American infrastructure: while China constructs data centers every month, the US is stuck waiting years just to get permits approved. That's according to Shark Tank's Kevin O'Leary, who's deeply involved in the data center sector and clearly frustrated with the pace.
"I'm deeply involved in the data-center sector, and here's the truth: we're letting China beat us because it takes years just to get permits approved," O'Leary posted on X. "Meanwhile, they build a data center every month."
The issue boils down to red tape—those unnecessary or overly complex rules and administrative procedures that inflate costs and strangle business opportunities. O'Leary argues the United States needs to slash through these barriers and accelerate construction if it wants to remain competitive in AI, energy, and cloud infrastructure.
"We can't win if we move this slowly," O'Leary wrote.
Nvidia Weighs In
O'Leary isn't alone in his concerns. Nvidia Corp. (NVDA) CEO Jensen Huang echoed similar warnings during a discussion with Center for Strategic and International Studies President John Hamre. Huang pointed out that building a US data center from groundbreaking to fully operational AI supercomputer takes roughly three years. To illustrate China's infrastructure advantages, he noted the country can construct an entire hospital in a weekend—a striking demonstration of speed and efficiency that America simply can't match right now.
The Energy Equation
Even if the US could solve its permitting problems tomorrow, there's another massive hurdle: power. Data centers are electricity monsters, and according to an August post by The Kobeissi Letter on X, American data centers now devour a record 5% of total US electricity demand.
This surge has already intensified pressure on the nation's stretched power grids. And the problem isn't getting smaller—it's accelerating as AI infrastructure demands continue growing.
The Numbers Game
Here's where things get interesting. The United States currently operates 4,165 data centers—the highest number of any country worldwide and dramatically more than China's 381, according to Statista data from November. On paper, America is winning. But quantity doesn't tell the whole story.
China is actively accelerating its data center expansion through aggressive government support, including subsidies that slash energy costs by up to 50%. These subsidies simultaneously boost domestic chip manufacturing and usage, creating a virtuous cycle for Chinese tech development.
The strategic question isn't whether America has more data centers today—it does. The question is whether the US can maintain that lead when its regulatory environment requires years for approvals while competitors move at breakneck speed. When the gap between planning and execution stretches to years, innovation suffers and competitive advantages erode.
For companies trying to build cutting-edge AI infrastructure, speed matters. Every month of delay is a month competitors spend training models, serving customers, and advancing their capabilities. O'Leary and Huang aren't just complaining about paperwork—they're highlighting a structural disadvantage that could reshape technological leadership.