South Korean conglomerate SK is laying out a vision for an artificial-intelligence ecosystem that stretches across three connected pillars: semiconductors, electricity, and data centers, according to 매일경제 (Maeil Business Newspaper).
The framing is notable because it treats AI not as a single product but as a chain of dependencies. Advanced AI models run on specialized chips. Those chips, packed by the thousands into data centers, consume enormous amounts of electricity. And data centers are the physical buildings where all of that computing actually happens. By describing its strategy as one that "spans chips, power, data centers," SK is signaling that it wants a hand in each link rather than just one.
The report from 매일경제 presents this as an ecosystem vision — a strategic direction for how the company's various businesses could fit together around the AI buildout, rather than a single announced project.
Beyond that high-level positioning, the available source material does not specify particular dollar figures, timelines, partner names, or facility locations. Readers should treat the story as a statement of corporate intent.
Why it matters: as the world races to build the infrastructure behind AI, the companies that control not just the chips but also the power and the buildings to house them stand to capture far more of the value — and SK is signaling it wants all three.