The Hidden Costs of the AI Boom on Consumer Electronics.
This week, we look at how the 2026 AI infrastructure boom is diverting silicon, memory production, and electricity away from consumer electronics, raising prices and worsening digital inequality.
We look at Bloomberg’s report that Alphabet, Amazon, Meta, and Microsoft budget about $650B in 2026 capex, dwarfing other industries, while the memory market’s three dominant suppliers (Samsung, SK Hynix, Micron) pivot toward high-bandwidth memory for AI.
OpenAI’s Stargate agreements are described as consuming up to 900,000 DRAM wafer starts per month (~40% of global output), and Micron exits consumer memory (ending Crucial). TrendForce projects steep 2026 price spikes for DRAM and NAND, driving IDC forecasts of falling smartphone and PC shipments, higher device prices, downgraded specs, and strained gaming GPU supply.
We also discuss the link between data centre's to rising electricity bills and US tariffs to further price increases, with refurbished devices as a limited stopgap and relief unlikely before 2027–2028.
