Castrol’ s Peter Huang on why data centre cooling has become a direct performance lever for AI infrastructure operators worldwide
CASTROL ON
Castrol’ s Peter Huang on why data centre cooling has become a direct performance lever for AI infrastructure operators worldwide
There is a moment in every emerging technology cycle when a peripheral concern becomes a central one. For data centre operators deploying AI infrastructure at scale, that moment has arrived for liquid cooling. The hardware no longer allows for ambiguity: rack densities that once peaked at 40 or 50 kilowatts are now brushing 200 kilowatts, and the thermal load that accompanies the shift has made cooling a fundamental constraint on what operators can extract from their investments.
Peter Huang, Global President of Data Center and Thermal Management at Castrol, has watched this transition from the inside. He has spent 15 years in the data centre industry, working across power, infrastructure and now thermal management, and he is direct about what has changed.“ For the past two years, this is the first time that I’ ve observed that there’ s a deep, deep integration between IT and facilities,” he says.“ We are no longer talking about individual designs – we’ re talking about a system-level redesign, a structural redesign of the data centre.”
4 June 2026