Scaling Backup Power from 2000 to 6250 kVA for Hyperscale Data Centres

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DateJune 18, 2026 AuthorMatthieu LADIRAY

Large-scale data centres require more than standby capacity; they require scalable backup power architectures that combine high unit output, strong resilience logic and reliable integration into mission-critical electrical systems. Baudouin positions its data centre generator range from 1900 kVA to 6250 kVA, with M33, M55 and M61-based platforms designed to support everything from large enterprise facilities to hyperscale campuses.

At the upper end of that range, the 20M55 and 20M61 define Baudouin’s high-power positioning for hyperscale backup power. Baudouin states that the 20M61 delivers up to 6250 kVA in standby mode, while the 20M55 provides 5250 kVA in recent data centre communications.

Why backup power must scale with data centre size

As data centres move from enterprise environments to hyperscale campuses, backup power requirements grow in both size and complexity. Larger IT loads, denser power blocks and more demanding uptime expectations mean that generator systems must scale not only in output, but also in architecture, redundancy logic and integration strategy.

This is why large-scale data centre generator selection is not simply about choosing the biggest available unit. Operators must assess how generator ratings, physical footprint, plant layout and expansion strategy fit together across current and future phases of the site.

Platform Published output signal Position in scaling logic
20M33 2500 kVA Entry point for larger dedicated data centre projects
12M55 3125 kVA Mid-range critical power for larger sites
16M55 4125 kVA Large data centre backup power applications
20M55 5250 kVA High-output platform bridging into hyperscale logic
20M61 6250 kVA standby Hyperscale backup power and high single-unit capacity

From 2000 to 5250 kVA: building the bridge to hyperscale

Baudouin’s current data centre generator communication presents a range that begins around 1900 kVA and extends to 5250 kVA through platforms such as the 20M33, 12M55, 16M55 and 20M55. This range creates a bridge between large enterprise or colocation facilities and the upper end of hyperscale-oriented standby power design.

Within this spectrum, the 20M55 is especially important because it sits at the threshold where very large single-unit standby power becomes a practical design lever. Baudouin presents the 20M55 as delivering 5250 kVA in recent data centre communications, making it a key platform for operators who need high-output backup power before moving to the 20M61 class.

20M61 and the move to 6250 kVA backup power

The 20M61 is the clearest expression of Baudouin’s hyperscale positioning. Baudouin states in recent product and event communications that the 20M61 delivers up to 6250 kVA in standby mode, and frames it as an advanced high-density data centre generator for mission-critical operations.

This matters because 6250 kVA changes the economics and layout logic of backup power design. Higher unit output can reduce the number of machines required for a given standby plant, which can influence synchronisation strategy, footprint efficiency and maintenance planning when the wider electrical architecture is engineered correctly.

HVO and the role of lower-carbon backup strategies

High-output backup power does not remove the need for more sustainable fuel strategies. Baudouin states that its data centre generator range is HVO-tested and capable of operating on Hydrotreated Vegetable Oil diesel conforming to EN15940, offering a lower-carbon alternative within diesel-based resilience architectures.

This is particularly relevant for hyperscale and large colocation operators, who increasingly need to align critical infrastructure with broader emissions and ESG objectives.

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