VERTIV CORPORATION
Lobbying for VERTIV CORPORATION · Critical digital infrastructure
Liquid Cooling for AI Act of 2025 (H.R. 5332): The Liquid Cooling for AI Act of 2025 would require the U.S. Government to commission a comprehensive review of liquid-cooling technologies for high-density AI and HPC facilities and establish federal best-practice guidance across agencies. By evaluating technical, economic, and regulatory barriers, the bill is intended to accelerate adoption of liquid cooling to improve thermal efficiency, reduce power waste, and unlock higher compute densities; Streamlining Procurement for Effective Execution and Delivery (SPEED) Act (H.R. 3838): The SPEED Act of 2025 aims to fast-track federal permitting for large-scale data centers and the associated grid infrastructure (e.g. high-voltage transmission, substations, and power generation) by creating streamlined environmental review paths and priority status for qualifying projects. It would enable co-permitting and synchronized regulatory review to reduce delays and better align energy deployment with surging demand from AI and high-compute facilities; Section 232 steel and aluminum tariffs; Section 232 copper tariffs.
Liquid Cooling for AI Act of 2025 (H.R. 5332): The Liquid Cooling for AI Act of 2025 would require the U.S. Government to commission a comprehensive review of liquid-cooling technologies for high-density AI and HPC facilities and establish federal best-practice guidance across agencies. By evaluating technical, economic, and regulatory barriers, the bill is intended to accelerate adoption of liquid cooling to improve thermal efficiency, reduce power waste, and unlock higher compute densities; Streamlining Procurement for Effective Execution and Delivery (SPEED) Act (H.R. 3838): The SPEED Act of 2025 aims to fast-track federal permitting for large-scale data centers and the associated grid infrastructure (e.g. high-voltage transmission, substations, and power generation) by creating streamlined environmental review paths and priority status for qualifying projects. It would enable co-permitting and synchronized regulatory review to reduce delays and better align energy deployment with surging demand from AI and high-compute facilities; Section 232 steel and aluminum tariffs; Section 232 copper tariffs.
Liquid Cooling for AI Act of 2025 (H.R. 5332): The Liquid Cooling for AI Act of 2025 would require the U.S. Government to commission a comprehensive review of liquid-cooling technologies for high-density AI and HPC facilities and establish federal best-practice guidance across agencies. By evaluating technical, economic, and regulatory barriers, the bill is intended to accelerate adoption of liquid cooling to improve thermal efficiency, reduce power waste, and unlock higher compute densities; Streamlining Procurement for Effective Execution and Delivery (SPEED) Act (H.R. 3838): The SPEED Act of 2025 aims to fast-track federal permitting for large-scale data centers and the associated grid infrastructure (e.g. high-voltage transmission, substations, and power generation) by creating streamlined environmental review paths and priority status for qualifying projects. It would enable co-permitting and synchronized regulatory review to reduce delays and better align energy deployment with surging demand from AI and high-compute facilities; Section 232 steel and aluminum tariffs; Section 232 copper tariffs.
Liquid Cooling for AI Act of 2025 (H.R. 5332): The Liquid Cooling for AI Act of 2025 would require the U.S. Government to commission a comprehensive review of liquid-cooling technologies for high-density AI and HPC facilities and establish federal best-practice guidance across agencies. By evaluating technical, economic, and regulatory barriers, the bill is intended to accelerate adoption of liquid cooling to improve thermal efficiency, reduce power waste, and unlock higher compute densities; Streamlining Procurement for Effective Execution and Delivery (SPEED) Act (H.R. 3838): The SPEED Act of 2025 aims to fast-track federal permitting for large-scale data centers and the associated grid infrastructure (e.g. high-voltage transmission, substations, and power generation) by creating streamlined environmental review paths and priority status for qualifying projects. It would enable co-permitting and synchronized regulatory review to reduce delays and better align energy deployment with surging demand from AI and high-compute facilities; Section 232 steel and aluminum tariffs; Section 232 copper tariffs.