Supply chain

In 2026, global manufacturing capacity is shaping project delivery as much as on-site activity. For many programs, the critical path is now intrinsically linked to global supply chain dependencies.

Across the construction industry, rising costs and extended lead times for critical equipment have become material project risks. Supply chain conditions now reflect a structural shift, with capacity constraints, longer lead times and procurement strategy playing a decisive role in project outcomes. For mission-critical and high-tech industrial projects, long lead equipment (LLE) now accounts for around 35% to 40% of total capital expenditure. This is shifting program risk away from traditional site activity and towards production pipelines and supplier capacity. In this context, building a resilient supply chain through early planning and engagement is essential to successful delivery.

These changing market dynamics should be viewed as part of a sustained trend rather than a short-term imbalance. This is reinforced by supplier behavior, with more than 80% of LLE suppliers investing in new or expanded facilities.

This chapter looks at how key supply chain indicators, including cost, time and vendor capacity, have evolved over time, and explores what that means for delivery today. The analysis draws on Linesight market intelligence, and a comprehensive global supply chain survey conducted in Q2 2026.

Achieving project resilience relies heavily on early supply chain engagement. To avoid delays, delivery teams must plan their design and supply chain engagement strategies in parallel.

Neil L. Doyle Director, Procurement and Supply Chain Management

Lead time analysis

Global overview

Global equipment lead times remain elevated, reflecting sustained demand pressure and persistent supply chain constraints across regions. Mechanical systems such as chillers, computer room air handlers (CRAHs) and cooling towers are generally tracking within circa 20 to 43 weeks, with controlled volatility and signs of modest lead time improvement into 2026, supported by diversified manufacturing capacity and more resilient logistics operations. In contrast, electrical infrastructure continues to face acute pressure. Generators exhibit significantly extended lead times, reaching over 100+ weeks in the Americas and Europe, underscoring a global imbalance between accelerating demand and constrained production capacity for power‑critical equipment.

Americas lead time analysis

The below charts show QoQ trends for equipment lead times in weeks from Q1 2024 to Q4 2026 (f).

Click or tap on equipment names to remove them from the chart. Click again to add the equipment back in. Hover or tap on data points in the chart to show the equipment lead time for the respective quarter.

Mechanical equipment

Mechanical equipment lead times in the US and Canada remain largely stable, although still elevated, with delivery timelines ranging from around 26 weeks at the lower end to around 40 weeks at the upper end, as of Q1 2026. Pressure is being driven by strong data center construction demand rather than a material deterioration in the supply chain, with earlier procurement, linked in part to constrained electrical infrastructure programs, continuing to place pressure on OEM production slots and support a tight but stable market.

The clearest structural pressure point is modular mechanical equipment, where lead times have increased from circa 32 weeks in 2024 to around 38 weeks from 2025 onward. This reflects the growing use of prefabricated strategies, increased fabrication intensity, added integration complexity and continued reliance on skilled factory labor. At the other end of the range, CRAH units remain comparatively more manageable at around 24 weeks from 2025 onward, reinforcing that pressure is not uniform across all mechanical equipment categories. Overall, mechanical equipment remains more balanced than electrical infrastructure, with conditions staying tight but showing signs of stabilization across several categories rather than broadening constraint.

Electrical equipment

Electrical equipment lead times in the Americas remain persistently extended, with delivery timelines ranging from around 26 weeks at the lower end to more than 100 weeks at the upper end. The dominant critical-path constraint continues to sit with large generators, where lead times have extended from circa 60 to 70 weeks in 2024 to around 100 to 105 weeks through 2025 and into 2026. This reflects sustained hyperscale and AI-led demand, complex manufacturing and testing requirements, and constrained OEM capacity, leaving generator procurement as the defining factor in many data center delivery schedules and with limited scope for near-term improvement.

Outside the generator market, the picture is tighter but more stable. Integrated electrical systems, including prefabricated skids and modules, remain exposed to fabrication bottlenecks and coordination complexity because delivery depends on multiple constrained subcomponents, which limits any meaningful acceleration despite the wider use of modular approaches. More standardized equipment, including LV and MV switchgear, UPS, STS and PDUs, is showing signs of stabilization and modest improvement, with much of the market trending towards the low-30-week to 40-week range by 2026. At the lower end, some categories are sitting closer to the low-20-week range but lead times across the wider package remain above pre-2024 norms, indicating a North American electrical supply chain that is still tight and only partially stabilized.

Cost trends analysis

Global overview

Sustained global cost escalation across long lead equipment is being driven by structural demand growth and capacity constraints. Linesight's cost data illustrates a consistent upward trend across all major equipment categories globally, with cost indices increasing from a baseline of 1.00 in Q1 2024 to approximately 1.08–1.19 by Q4 2026.

This reflects a broad-based and sustained cost escalation environment, underpinned by strong global demand for data center infrastructure, particularly driven by hyperscale expansion and the rapid acceleration of AI investment. The scale and pace of this demand have outstripped existing global manufacturing capacity for critical equipment, resulting in persistent supply demand imbalances and sustained pricing pressure across both electrical and mechanical systems.

Acceleration in pricing from early 2025 reflects global convergence of macroeconomic, trade, and labor pressures, establishing a new structural cost baseline. A clear inflection point emerges from Q1 2025 onward, where cost increases accelerate across all equipment categories, transitioning from moderate to more pronounced growth. This shift is driven by the combined effects of global tariff measures on metals and electrical components, rising labor and manufacturing costs across key production regions, and intensified procurement activity as developers seek to secure capacity from a constrained supply. By 2026, the market demonstrates characteristics of a fully constrained environment, where pricing trends stabilize at elevated levels, indicating a transition from short-term inflationary effects to a new, structurally higher baseline for global long‑lead equipment costs.

Americas cost trends analysis

The below charts show QoQ cost trends analysis from Q1 2024 to Q4 2026 (f).

Click or tap on equipment names to remove them from the chart. Click again to add the equipment back in. Hover or tap on data points in the chart to show the cost index for the respective quarter.

Mechanical equipment

The US and Canada are seeing measured but consistent cost escalation across mechanical systems, reflecting steady demand growth rather than acute supply constraints. The data shows a gradual increase in pricing, rising from a baseline of 1.00 in Q1 2024 to approximately 1.10–1.12 by late 2026 for core systems such as air cooled chillers, CRAH units, fan wall units, and cooling towers. This is driven by sustained data center deployment across the US and Canada, particularly for AI-ready facilities. These systems are not yet subject to severe supply bottlenecks, with cost increases primarily reflecting incremental material cost inflation, steady OEM capacity utilization, and continued demand expansion.

Modular cooling solutions stand out as a clear outlier, rising more sharply to approximately 1.18 by Q4 2026, significantly outpacing traditional mechanical systems. This reflects the growing adoption of prefabricated and modular construction approaches in the market. These systems involve greater fabrication intensity, higher labor input, and coordination of multiple components, making them more sensitive to manufacturing constraints and cost pressures, resulting in a steeper pricing trajectory.

In 2026, the pricing environment reflects a moderately constrained but stable market, where mechanical system costs continue to rise in line with broader construction and supply chain dynamics, rather than as a result of acute shortages.

Electrical equipment

Electrical long lead equipment in the US and Canada is experiencing accelerated cost escalation driven by hyperscale expansion and acute power infrastructure constraints. The resulting imbalance is being further compounded by the limited number of global OEM suppliers and constrained production lines, establishing electrical equipment as the primary cost driver within the Americas long lead equipment markets.

Integrated and modular electrical systems show the highest cost increases due to compounded subcomponent constraints and fabrication intensity. The most substantial cost growth is concentrated in electrical modules, electrical skids, medium voltage transformers, and low and medium voltage switchgears which exhibit a steeper trajectory compared to standalone equipment such as UPS and STS. In 2026, pricing levels plateau at elevated levels, indicating that the market has entered a fully constrained state, where cost increases are no longer cyclical but instead represent a new, structurally higher baseline for electrical long lead equipment in the region.

Supply chain now defines the critical path in capital programs

In conventional construction projects, the critical path typically runs through design, planning, and construction. In today’s mission-critical and high-tech programmes, that path has shifted. It now runs through power availability, procurement, and labour.

This shift reflects a structural reset driven by:

In 2026, global data center capacity continues to expand rapidly, continuing the trend of recent years. Latest published data shows capacity increased by 45% between 2020 and 2024. Suppliers of equipment such as transformers and precision cooling have not expanded proportionally.

In 2026, lead times for critical long lead equipment (LLE) remain significantly extended, with some more than doubling since 2021. This reflects severe supply chain constraints, limited OEM capacity, and surging global demand from energy and infrastructure projects.

The average capital cost per MW for LLE has increased by approximately 50%–60% since 2021, driven by inflation in materials, components and labor, as well as capacity constraints and elevated order backlogs across key OEMs, which have strengthened pricing dynamics. The share of the total capital cost has increased to 35%-40% today, from 25%-30% historically, reinforcing its critical role in project execution within the construction industry.

Geopolitical tension is disrupting logistics. Recent tensions in the Middle East have pushed the global supply chain pressure index (GSCPI) to its highest level since July 2022. The annual average between 2022 and 2025 was 0 to 0.87. For projects with three-to-five-year delivery timelines, this creates a material risk. The trade and tariff environment at equipment delivery can differ significantly from the assumptions made at financial commitment.1

Materials exposure is now central to supply chain assessment. Long‑lead items depend on layered, globally linked supply chains. Disruption at raw material level, for say copper or aluminum, cascades through OEMs, system integrators and logistics. Therefore, commodity volatility now feeds directly into equipment pricing and delivered‑cost risk.2

Key survey findings

To complement this analysis with market insight, we conducted a structured survey of companies across the data center supply chain and summarized the key findings here.

Supplier capacity is beginning to tighten across the supply chain, shifting from a period of relative availability towards increasing constraint. While many suppliers still report some spare capacity today, a growing proportion are already operating at high utilization levels. While our survey anticipates that investments in new or expanded capacity will ease pressure somewhat in the second half of 2026 and 2027, vendor prioritization and securing access to production slots will remain critical factors in program planning and procurement strategy.

Supplier capacity availability and forecast

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Risks and impact

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Investment and technology

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AI deployment

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Building resilience into procurement pathways

Resilience in procurement has become a critical differentiator in data center delivery, as traditional sourcing models struggle against extended lead times, supplier concentration, and sustained demand for long lead equipment. Leading organizations are shifting to proactive, risk‑informed procurement strategies, characterised by early engagement, diversified supply networks, and closer integration across design, procurement, and delivery.

Standardization, modularization, and digital enablement are further strengthening resilience by improving flexibility, expanding supplier options, and enhancing market visibility. As a result, procurement is evolving from a transactional function into a strategic capability, enabling greater delivery certainty, cost control, and competitive advantage in an increasingly constrained global market.

Linesight delivers effective supply chain management services to clients globally. Our specialist teams can bring innovative relationship management skills and advance all aspects of sustainable sourcing, whilst mitigating logistical challenges.

For more information please visit our website.

Sources

  1. Global Supply Chain Pressure Index (GSCPI), April 2026
  2. Metals at scale for AI at scale: securing the data centre materials backbone, December 2025


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