Open Compute Project and CurrentOS logos

OCP, Current/OS Push Direct Current Standard for AI Data Centers

The two open-source foundations formalize a joint roadmap for low-voltage DC power distribution in AI data centers ahead of their appearance at the Barcelona summit.

The two open-source foundations formalize a joint roadmap for low-voltage DC power distribution in AI data centers ahead of their appearance at the Barcelona summit later this month.

The Open Compute Project Foundation and the Current/OS Foundation said Wednesday they are advancing a joint effort to establish open standards for direct current power distribution in AI data centers, with a joint keynote planned for the OCP EMEA Summit in Barcelona on April 29-30.

The alliance was formalized in December 2025. Since then, the two organizations have developed a white paper on low-voltage direct current (LVDC) power distribution, a training program through the OCP Academy, and a formal specification document outlining technical requirements and interoperability standards. The goal is vendor-neutral adoption across the data center industry.

ALSO READ: OrbitronAI Launches NovaOS to Govern AI Agents in Regulated Industries

Direct current reduces the number of electrical conversion stages between a power source and computing hardware. In a conventional alternating-current infrastructure, each conversion step dissipates energy as heat. Eliminating those steps, the foundations argue, increases power density and cuts waste, a material concern as AI workloads push facility power demands to new levels.

By uniting OCP’s open data center leadership with Current/OS’s open DC microgrid standards, we’re shaping a path toward a vendor-neutral industry framework for DC-native data centers, making them more adaptable to next-generation AI infrastructure while improving overall facility efficiency and resilience.
James Kelly, VP of Market Intelligence & Innovation, Open Compute Project Foundation

Vincenzo Salmeri, president of Current/OS, said direct current “offers significant gains in energy efficiency and architectural simplicity,” describing the OCP collaboration as a step toward accelerating that transition across the broader industry. 

At the Barcelona summit, a joint session tied to the OCP Data Center Facility sub-project will address LVDC adoption, including the practical barriers the organizations say still face in the industry. No timeline for finalizing the specification was disclosed in Wednesday’s release.

The Current/OS Foundation, headquartered in the Netherlands, focuses on interoperability guidelines for DC microgrid systems. The Open Compute Project, based in Austin, Texas, was founded by Meta in 2011 to open-source data center hardware designs and has since grown to include hyperscalers, telecom operators, and technology vendors.

Avatar photo
NN Desk

Lasă un răspuns

Adresa ta de email nu va fi publicată. Câmpurile obligatorii sunt marcate cu *

Stay updated with NervNow Weekly

Subscribe now