Newest hyperscale boom · Intel/Google/AWS

Data Center Backup Power in Columbus, Ohio

Central Ohio has become one of the fastest-emerging hyperscale regions in the U.S., anchored by Intel's ~$20B chip fabs and major Google, Meta, and AWS campuses around New Albany.

$20B
Intel fab nearby
New Albany
Key cluster
Boom
Growth
III/IV
Tier

1Columbus's Data Center Landscape

Central Ohio — New Albany, Columbus, and Hilliard — has rapidly become a hyperscale hotspot, anchored by Intel's roughly $20B semiconductor fabs and large campuses from Google, Meta, and AWS, all served by AEP Ohio. As a young, fast-scaling market, backup-power standards are being set now.

2Local Operating Conditions

Columbus's humid-continental climate means designing for both cold winters and warm humid summers:

ConditionImpact on the gensetDesign response
Cold wintersCold-start, gelled fuelBlock heaters, winterized fuel, battery upkeep
Warm humid summersOutput derating; condensationHigh-ambient cooling; anti-condensation
Storms / grid eventsTransfer reliabilityRobust ATS, regular testing

3Compliance & Air Permitting

Ohio requires: (1) an Ohio EPA air permit where thresholds apply; (2) U.S. EPA stationary emergency engine compliance (NSPS / RICE NESHAP); (3) NFPA 110 testing. Confirm with the Ohio EPA before procurement.

4Sizing for Columbus Data Centers

Capacity is critical IT load × PUE plus growth margin, designed for both winter cold-start and summer derating. The hyperscale scale of Columbus projects pushes many builds toward large, parallel genset plants.

5Redundancy: Tier III vs Tier IV

Columbus hyperscale campuses run Tier III (N+1) or Tier IV (2N), often in large parallel arrangements given multi-hundred-MW project sizes.

6ASO Generators for Columbus

ASO manufactures diesel gensets up to 3000 kVA, paralleling-capable and available containerized, delivered through its U.S. sales and service channel. Contact us to plan for Columbus's hyperscale scale and confirm Ohio EPA permitting.

?Frequently Asked Questions

How much backup power does a Columbus data center need?

Critical IT load × PUE plus growth margin and the redundancy factor; hyperscale Columbus campuses often require large parallel genset plants of tens of MW.

Do generators in Ohio need an air permit?

Where thresholds apply, yes — an Ohio EPA air permit plus U.S. EPA emergency engine compliance. Confirm with the Ohio EPA.

Why is Columbus a growing data center market?

Intel's ~$20B fabs plus major Google, Meta, and AWS campuses have made central Ohio one of the fastest-emerging hyperscale regions in the country.

How does Ohio's climate affect generators?

The humid-continental climate demands both winter cold-start provisions and summer high-ambient cooling.

Can ASO supply generators to Columbus data centers?

Yes — paralleling-capable gensets up to 3000 kVA through ASO's U.S. channel. Contact ASO to plan hyperscale capacity and confirm Ohio compliance.

Sources & Methodology

Standards & sources referenced
  • Uptime Institute — Tier Standard
  • U.S. EPA — Stationary CI engine standards (NSPS 40 CFR 60 IIII; RICE NESHAP 40 CFR 63 ZZZZ)
  • NFPA 110 — Emergency & Standby Power Systems
  • Ohio EPA — air permitting
  • ISO 8528 — Generator set ratings

Specifications and compliance figures on this page follow the public standards above. ASO is a generator manufacturer; confirm jurisdiction-specific permitting with the relevant authority before procurement.

Planning backup power for a Columbus data center?

ASO supplies diesel gensets up to 3000 kVA — containerized, delivered through our U.S. sales & service channel.

Request a Quotation

By Smith Parkson, Power Systems Engineer · ASO Genset · Last updated 2026-06-18