
Hakan Gunes 🇨🇦
271 posts

Hakan Gunes 🇨🇦
@Stvcarell
You can have my answer now Senator, nothing













$NVDA CEO Jensen Huang said it clearly AI data centers need gigawatts of power. Power availability decides where they get built & GPUs do nothing if the grid cannot feed them. Value is moving to the companies that build & control power for AI.



$QS @QuantumScapeCo This is where Siemens enters the story… Siemens + NVIDIA = global factory design + automation partnership Fluence (QuantumScape’s energy storage partner) ↳ Founded jointly by Siemens + AES So the chain looks like this: NVIDIA → industrial automation Siemens → digital twin factories Fluence → grid energy storage QuantumScape → next-gen batteries powering those grids 💡 These companies already sit in the same ecosystem. Siemens, Foxconn, FANUC — these firms design robot factories using Omniverse digital twins Siemens and PowerCo announced their strategic partnership in July 2023. ➡ PowerCo is VW’s battery manufacturing division ➡ Siemens is building PowerCo’s factories ➡ VW + PowerCo are partnered with QuantumScape ➡ Siemens + VW factories are shown in NVIDIA Omniverse robotics presentations So the chain looks like: NVIDIA → Siemens → PowerCo → QuantumScape NVIDIA's expansion into robotics meaningfully increases the total addressable market for QuantumScape. QS has indirect supply chain links via Murata + Corning → Apple ecosystem. Robots for logistics → Foxconn → another path. is all about mass-manufacturing and energy-efficient intelligent machines… …and that directly overlaps with QuantumScape’s solid-state batteries.

$QS For Quantumscape investors ( I hope you will let go of your fear a little and see the potential for the future.) QuantumScape’s CEO Siva Sivaram has publicly said: “We’re first focused on automotive… then extend to stationary storage, data centers, and robotics.” Siemens Energy co-owns Fluence Energy, which already manages grid-scale storage for data-center operators (especially in Europe and the U.S.). By partnering with Fluence, Corning, and Murata, QuantumScape has already built the industrial triangle it needs to enter AI-era data-center energy infrastructure — safely, quietly, and with global reach. Data centers could become QuantumScape’s most profitable vertical, since margins are higher than automotive. If nothing goes wrong, there is a high probability that they will log in via Fluence Energy (Sıemens). Siemens Energy (and the broader Siemens AG group) clearly states that it provides solutions for data centers. Here are relevant links and details: •Siemens Energy’s website: “Powering AI data centers: Meeting North America’s electrical and energy needs” — they highlight modular power-plant, grid-connection, storage, and on-site power solutions tailored for data centers. siemens-energy.com/global/en/home… Siemens Energy’s “Data Center Energy Landscape” page: Their portfolio covers “front-of-the-meter” and “behind-the-meter” solutions for data-centers (on-site generation, power distribution, energy-storage) specifically siemens-energy.com/global/en/home… Siemens and Eaton Corporation announced a collaboration (June 2025) to deliver modular, on-site power generation and system solutions tailored for data center operators. eaton.com/us/en-us/compa… Siemens & Compass Datacenters signed a multi-year agreement for medium-voltage modular power solutions for data center campuses built for large tech customer compassdatacenters.com/news/siemens-a… Siemens already supplies core power infrastructure to hyperscalers Even though Siemens doesn’t make the servers themselves, it provides power-distribution, automation, and grid-connection systems that feed large hyperscale campuses — including those run by Microsoft and Google. Evidence: •Compass Datacenters + Siemens (multi-year deal) Compass builds data-center campuses for Microsoft, Google, and AWS. In their official release: “Siemens will provide medium-voltage switchgear, power distribution, and energy-automation solutions to Compass Datacenters for hyperscale clients.” compassdatacenters.com/news/siemens-a… This means Siemens hardware directly powers Microsoft Azure and Google Cloud facilities built by Compass. •Siemens Smart Infrastructure – Data Centers Division Siemens lists Microsoft and Google as case studies on its data-center page (for digital-twin energy modeling, grid stability, and HVAC/power optimization). xcelerator.siemens.com/global/en/indu… Siemens provides the critical electrical backbone for data centers: •Medium-voltage gear and transformers •Switchboards and busway systems •Digital twin software to optimize cooling and energy efficiency •Energy-storage integration — where Fluence Energy (co-owned by Siemens Energy) can bring battery systems online Siemens and Fluence already supply battery systems to large-scale data-center operators through Compass and grid contractors. •As QuantumScape transitions into stationary storage, Siemens can easily add QS’s solid-state packs into its existing data-center architectures. •That’s why Siva Sivaram keeps repeating: “Automotive first… then stationary storage, data centers, and robotics.” Siemens and Fluence already cover those three downstream channels.








