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Yesterday I saw a news story worth commenting on. Germany has just announced a very ambitious plan for AI infrastructure by 2030. Basically, the German government wants to quadruple the computing capacity dedicated to artificial intelligence compared to 2025 levels, while also doubling the country's overall data center capacity.
Minister Carsten Wildberger explained that this strategy is a direct response to the growing demand for data processing driven by AI applications, cloud services, and digitalization. Makes sense, right? Everyone is rushing into this AI race now.
The plan includes 28 concrete measures with a very clear goal: to turn Germany into a European data center hub with data sovereignty. This is interesting because it shows how European countries are trying not to rely so much on foreign infrastructure for their critical operations.
What catches my attention is the scale of the investment. Quadrupling AI capacity is no small feat. This will require heavy investment in infrastructure, energy, and perhaps partnerships with global tech players. Germany is clearly betting big that AI will continue to be the main growth driver in the coming years.
For those following the tech and infrastructure sector, this is the kind of move that could open up interesting opportunities. Europe is waking up to the importance of having its own computational capacity.