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Mitsubishi Heavy Industries joins Nvidia partner network for power and cooling solutions

Mitsubishi Heavy Industries has joined Nvidia's Partner Network as a Power & Cooling Partner to develop 10MW-class chillers and modular cooling platforms for Nvidia's DSX AI infrastructure. The partnership aims to provide efficient thermal management and 800 VDC power delivery for factory-scale AI systems, addressing water consumption and heat density challenges.

read2 min views1 publishedJul 16, 2026
Mitsubishi Heavy Industries joins Nvidia partner network for power and cooling solutions
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The Japanese industrial giant will develop 10MW-class chillers and modular cooling platforms for Nvidia's factory-scale AI infrastructure

Mitsubishi Heavy Industries, a company best known for building things like jet engines and nuclear power plants, is now officially in the business of keeping Nvidia’s AI factories from overheating. MHI has joined Nvidia’s Partner Network as a Power & Cooling Partner, tasked with developing integrated thermal management and power delivery systems for Nvidia’s DSX platform.

Think of it as the industrial equivalent of strapping a radiator to a supercomputer, except the radiator weighs several tons and uses closed-loop liquid cooling capable of operating at inlet temperatures as high as 45°C.

What MHI is actually building #

The partnership centers on two core technologies: 10MW-class chillers and modular cooling platforms, or MCPs. MHI’s systems will pair high-efficiency thermal management with an 800 VDC power infrastructure. That’s a significant design choice. Direct current power distribution at 800 volts reduces conversion losses compared to traditional AC setups, which matters enormously when you’re talking about facilities that consume electricity at industrial scale.

The closed-loop cooling approach is particularly notable. Traditional data center cooling often relies on evaporative systems that consume vast amounts of water, a growing concern as AI infrastructure expands into regions facing water scarcity. Nvidia’s DSX vision calls for systems that can operate with minimal water consumption while still handling the extreme heat densities that modern AI accelerators produce.

Vladimir Troy, Nvidia’s VP of AI Infrastructure, highlighted MHI’s role in building scalable, energy-efficient AI factories.

The broader AI infrastructure race #

The timing of this partnership is no accident. Nikkei Asia first reported discussions between the two companies on July 14, with MHI’s official confirmation following on July 16. Both companies have referenced ambitious timelines, with key projects involving partners such as SK Group targeting 2028-2029 completion.

Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our

Editorial Policy.

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