The murmur in the trading room, it’s always a tell. Today, it’s a low, almost anxious hum, like a server room on the verge of overload — which, in a way, it is. The focus, or at least the worry, seems to be on power, specifically the relentless energy demands of AI data centers. C2i, an Indian startup, is stepping into the breach, and, as of February 15, 2026, they’ve secured a $15 million funding round, led by Peak XV.
The core problem? Data centers are power-hungry beasts. As AI models grow more complex, the energy consumption skyrockets. This puts a huge strain on existing infrastructure. C2i’s pitch, as I understand it, is a grid-to-GPU approach, aimed at reducing power losses. Or that’s the hope, anyway.
This isn’t just a tech story; it’s a market one. The energy sector is watching closely, because it’s kind of a big deal. According to a recent report from the Brookings Institution, the surge in AI computing could increase global electricity demand by 20% by the end of the decade, if left unchecked.
One analyst at a major firm, speaking on condition of anonymity, noted that the current infrastructure is not designed to handle the anticipated load. “We’re talking about a fundamental bottleneck,” they said, “the grid wasn’t built for this, and the costs are going to be astronomical if we don’t fix it.”
C2i’s funding is a bet on a solution. It’s a bet that they can improve efficiency, reduce waste, and build a more sustainable future for AI. Peak XV, by backing the startup, is signaling a belief in that vision.
The details are still emerging, of course. How exactly C2i plans to achieve these gains remains to be seen. But the core problem is clear, the stakes are high, and the market is hungry for solutions.
The room feels tense — still does, in a way. The numbers, the projections, the whispers about grid failures, they’re all part of the equation. And the clock is ticking.

