Transformer lead times have received significant attention in the AI infrastructure press. The switchgear shortage has not. This is a mistake: medium and high voltage switchgear, circuit breakers and protection relays face lead times that are nearly as long as transformers — and without them, a transformer is useless.
WHAT SWITCHGEAR IS AND WHY IT MATTERS
Switchgear is the collective term for the electrical equipment used to switch, protect and isolate electrical circuits. In a data center power infrastructure, it includes:
- Medium voltage switchgear (1–52kV): Controls the distribution of power from the incoming transformer to the facility's internal systems
- High voltage circuit breakers: Protection devices that disconnect circuits under fault conditions
- Protection relays: Intelligence systems that detect faults and trigger circuit breakers
- Ring main units: Distribution switchgear for looped network configurations
A data center cannot operate without switchgear. It is as essential as the transformer — and currently almost as difficult to procure.
CURRENT LEAD TIMES
HV circuit breakers (72–145kV): 24–42 months
Protection relays and automation systems: 12–24 months
Key manufacturers: Schneider Electric, ABB, Siemens, Eaton, Lucy Electric
WHY SWITCHGEAR IS TIGHT
The switchgear shortage has the same root cause as the transformer shortage: a sudden surge in demand from data centers, renewable energy infrastructure and grid modernisation, hitting manufacturing capacity that was sized for pre-AI demand levels.
Additionally, switchgear modernisation across European and North American utilities — driven by aging infrastructure and grid digitalisation programmes — is consuming a significant share of production capacity independently of the data center surge.
THE COMPOUND PROBLEM
A data center project that successfully secures transformer delivery in 30 months still needs switchgear. If the switchgear lead time is 36 months, the transformer arrives at a site that cannot yet use it. The critical path is determined by the longest lead time item — and developers who have focused only on transformers may be surprised to find switchgear is their actual bottleneck.
MV switchgear panels: 18–36 months
HV circuit breakers: 24–42 months
Standby generators: 12–18 months
UPS systems: 6–12 months
All items must arrive before energisation is possible
SOURCING STRATEGIES
Several strategies can reduce switchgear lead times:
- Standardisation: Standard switchgear configurations have shorter lead times than custom designs. Working with manufacturers' standard product ranges rather than project-specific designs saves months.
- Modular procurement: Ordering switchgear in standardised modules before the final configuration is locked allows earlier production slot reservation.
- Second-hand switchgear: Less developed than the used transformer market, but tested and certified used MV switchgear from industrial sources can reduce procurement timelines significantly.
- European sourcing for US projects: The same logic that applies to transformers applies to switchgear — European manufacturers may have better availability than US counterparts.