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Friday, June 13, 2025

Data Centres


CyrusOne plans new London facility
CyrusOne, a global data centre developer and operator, has announced plans for a brand-new data centre facility on the outskirts of London, with sustainability, community, and biodiversity at its core. As the company's sixth location in the UK, LON6 is set to deliver 90 megawatts of IT capacity. Located in Iver Heath, Buckinghamshire, the LON6 data centre will deliver IT capacity to 30,000m² of technical space across four double-storey and two single-storey data halls. The development is expected to break ground in Q3 2026. With initial power due to arrive mid 2027, the first capacity is expected to be delivered in early 2028. “This development marks an important step in our European growth journey,” says Matt Pullen, EVP and Managing Director, Europe, CyrusOne. “We’re thrilled to be announcing our plans for this new facility and continuing our growth in London. As demand for digital services continues to accelerate, larger facilities are necessary to provide the economies of scale that customers need, while also ensuring maximum functionality and mitigated risk of downtime. The UK market enables us to respond to these requirements, and we look forward to continuing our expansion and supporting the Government to establish the UK as a centre of excellence in digital services for technology innovation.” Secretary of State for Science Peter Kyle comments, “This fantastic new facility will help to power many of our online tasks, from navigating with online maps, to messaging and shopping online and we are committed to growing this vital infrastructure and giving the UK the opportunity to thrive in the 21st century. “Through our AI Opportunities Action Plan, we promised to transform these digital powerhouses into platforms for progress, creating jobs and unlocking breakthroughs that will benefit people across the country. As a result of this new facility in Buckinghamshire, local people will benefit from the creation of 540 long-term new jobs, including roles in engineering, sustainability, and security, and over 30 apprenticeship opportunities for young people – turbocharging economic growth in the area and helping us deliver on our Plan for Change.” Set into the ground, with green roofs and planted walls, the facility is designed to be integrated into the landscape. It aims to deliver a 71% Biodiversity Net Gain for local habitats – seven times higher than the 10% required by government regulation – alongside other community benefits. The data centre is designed to achieve a BREEAM “Excellent” certification and will provide on-site photovoltaic panels to deliver 64% of the regulated office energy demand. Powered from Iver Grid Supply Point, the design uses 100% certified renewable electricity provided by SSEN. The project has the expressed aim to "restore and reconnect the landscape," seeking to improve the site’s biodiversity through the creation of an ecologically rich parkland and new habitats, "enhancing the quality" of the Colne Valley Regional Park. Extensive landscaping plans include the planting of 670 trees (including 145 fruit trees) over 7,000m² of woodland and 90,600m² of mixed meadow and acid grassland. 72,800m² of the newly-created green biodiverse space will be accessible to the public, with an edible landscape, a biodiverse lake, woodland walks, and a cycle path for the local community. CyrusOne has also committed to a long-term Landscape Ecological Management Plan which aims to ensure maintenance and continued public access to the space for a minimum of 25 years. A ‘hidden valley’ will provide an access road around the building, with landscaped terraces providing daylight, fresh air, and views from the exposed timber framed customer and employee offices. Rainwater collection is to be treated and reused within the site, alongside free air cooling from ambient air whenever possible, and half of the designated parking spaces will provide on-site charging hubs for electric cars. The proposal, the company says, is responsive to the needs of the local community and provides a range of benefits, encapsulated in a total investment of more than £1.2 billion into the local and national economy. The campus is set to include a stone gabion clad training centre with industry-specific facilities for employees and students sitting within the campus, yet outside of the secure perimeter for easy access. It is estimated that over 580 full time equivalent (FTE) construction jobs will be created over the development phase and a further 540 FTE skilled employees will be required by CyrusOne and its customers to maintain and run the facility once fully operational. “We’ve been working hand-in-hand with Apt, Atelier Ten, Cameo Landscape Architects, HDR, Ramboll, Cratus, Montagu Evans, and Radcliffes Environmental on the proposals and designs, alongside Longcross Land, who provided investment guidance,” continues Matt. “It’s been a fantastic experience collaborating with industry-leading firms aligned to our sustainability- and community-focused vision, and we look forward to seeing the plans come to life. Additionally, we’ve received support from HM Treasury, the UK Department of Business & Trade (DBT), Department for Science, Innovation & Technology (DSIT), and the Office for Investment (OFI) which has been critical in progressing with the project and reaching this important milestone.” For more from CyrusOne, click here.

ABB and Applied Digital announce partnership
Applied Digital, a builder and operator of data centres, has launched an infrastructure partnership with ABB, a multinational corporation specialising in industrial automation and electrification products, at the company’s greenfield 400 MW campus in North Dakota, United States. The collaboration aims to innovate energy-efficient solutions to meet the needs of rapidly advancing artificial intelligence (AI) capabilities. As part of this long-term partnership, the first orders were booked in Q4 2024 and Q1 2025. Further financial details of the partnership were not disclosed. Central to the partnership is a new medium voltage power architecture using ABB’s HiPerGuard Medium Voltage Static Uninterruptible Power Supply (UPS). The HiPerGuard technology seeks to help AI data centres increase power density while compressing electrical plant footprints and increasing energy efficiency. The partnership covers the complete design and development of the site’s electrical infrastructure. Conventional data centres use low voltage power distribution and UPS systems. Switching to medium voltage for the UPS system and power distribution should enable data centres to scale more efficiently, expanding in 25 MW blocks. With fewer parts and cabling, installation should be simpler and reliability higher. "What we are building with ABB is going to completely change the way our industry designs large-scale data centres. By leveraging ABB's cutting-edge technology and global reach, we are able to redefine the electrical infrastructure landscape and meet the growing demands to support large-scale AI Factories,” claims Todd Gale, Chief Development Officer, Applied Digital. Massimiliano Cifalitti, Smart Power President, ABB Electrification, comments, "Partnerships like this are accelerating the timeline for AI-ready data centres with more competitive, resilient power infrastructures. ABB’s technology is designed for peak performance with dedicated capacity across our global production network and industry-leading innovation. ABB teams are ready to deliver at scale and at speed.” For more from ABB, click here.

Trane expands liquid cooling portfolio
Trane, an American manufacturer of heating, ventilation, and air conditioning (HVAC) systems, has announced enhanced liquid cooling capabilities for its thermal management systems, intended to help data centres become more future-ready. These include new, scalable Coolant Distribution Units (CDU), from 2.5MW to 10MW. “We are a trusted innovator for mission-critical infrastructure, continuously co-innovating with our customers to design and develop the custom, integrated thermal management systems needed to support sustainable business growth,” claims Steve Obstein, Vice President and General Manager, Data Centers & High-Tech, Trane Technologies. “Through our scalable, modular approach to liquid cooling we can provide a platform for future sustainable capacity growth and thermal load requirements associated with rapidly escalating AI needs.” The scalable 2.5MW to 10MW platform adds to Trane's 1MW CDU, aiming to give data centres flexible, direct-to-chip cooling capacity to manage high-density computing environments. The company says it supports operations and uptime throughout the lifecycle of the data centre through its service and network of data-centre-qualified technicians, located in proximity to customers, and Smart Service options for monitoring, predictive maintenance, and energy management. Key features of the new products include: • Modular scalability — Supporting cooling capacities up to 10MW, adaptable to data centre sizes. • Direct-to-chip liquid cooling technology — Optimised for high-density data centres. • Compact footprint — Provides up to 10MW cooling capacity in a factory-skid-mounted design. • Service and support — Access to resources and data-centre-qualified technicians from Trane. For more from Trane, click here.

Black & White Engineering appoints country lead
Black & White Engineering, a data centre design consultancy, has appointed a new country lead to head up its growing Frankfurt operation and accelerate expansion in the German market. Timm Weis joins as Country Manager following more than a decade in MEP design for mission-critical infrastructure, bringing experience of delivering data centre projects across Germany for global clients. The Frankfurt base, which opened in late 2023, is expected to add between 30 and 50 engineers over the next three years. The office has already secured a position in the German market, supporting hyperscale and large-campus developments ranging from 30MW to 800MW of IT capacity. The team acts as a lead designer on projects, overseeing the full design process and coordination with local authorities. Timm comments, “Germany’s data centre market is developing rapidly and our role is to help clients stay ahead, whether that’s navigating local planning processes, improving energy performance, or delivering complex builds at scale. We’re building a team in Frankfurt with the technical expertise and local understanding needed to support that growth with precision and purpose. “My immediate focus is on attracting the right talent and ensuring Black & White continues to meet the high standards expected by clients in this market. We’ve already established strong foundations here and the potential for further growth, especially in taking on lead design roles and supporting the retrofit of legacy data centres, is huge.” The Frankfurt office’s remit also includes optimising legacy data centres to meet energy efficiency targets set out in Germany’s 2023 Energy Efficiency Act. With a high concentration of older sites in Frankfurt, this represents a significant area for retrofit and redesign work. Steven Horn, UK and Europe Director at Black & White Engineering, says, “Timm’s appointment marks the next step in scaling our operations and delivering the best of Black & White to clients in one of Europe’s most dynamic data centre markets. “Frankfurt sits at the heart of Germany’s digital infrastructure ecosystem and our growth here reflects both demand from clients and our strategy to be where the projects are, with the right people on the ground.” Black & White Engineering has a team of over 800 employees across the UK, EU, Asia, and the UAE, with 93% of the business dedicated to data centre design. For more from Black & White, click here.

Schneider Electric launches new data centre solutions
Schneider Electric, a player in the digital transformation of energy management and automation, today announced new data centre solutions designed with the aim of meeting the demands of next-generation AI cluster architectures. Adding to its EcoStruxure Data Center Solutions portfolio, the company has introduced a Prefabricated Modular EcoStruxure Pod Data Center solution that consolidates infrastructure for liquid cooling, high-power busway, and high-density NetShelter Racks. In addition, the EcoStruxure Rack Solutions incorporate rack configurations and frameworks designed to accelerate High Performance Computing (HPC) and AI data centre deployments. “The sheer power and density required for AI clusters create bottlenecks that demand a new approach to data centre architecture,” says Himamshu Prasad, Senior Vice President of EcoStruxure IT, Transactional & Edge, and Energy Storage Center of Excellence at Schneider Electric. “Customers need integrated infrastructure solutions that not only handle extreme thermal loads and dynamic power profiles but also deploy rapidly, scale predictably, and operate efficiently and sustainably. Our innovative next-generation EcoStruxure solutions that support NVIDIA technology address these critical requirements head on.” Here is an overview of the new products:● Prefabricated Modular EcoStruxure Pod Data Center - Prefabricated, scalable pod architecture that seeks to enable operators to deploy high-density racks, supporting pods up to 1MW, at scale. ● EcoStruxure Rack Solutions - High-density rack systems which adapt to EIA, ORV3, and NVIDIA MGX modular design standards approved by certain IT chip and server manufacturers. According to the company, configurations accommodate an array of power and cooling distribution schemes and employ Motivair in-rack liquid cooling, as well as new rack and power distribution products including: o NetShelter SX Advanced Enclosureo NetShelter Rack PDU Advancedo NetShelter Open Architecture “Schneider Electric’s innovative solutions provide the reliable, scalable infrastructure our customers need to accelerate their AI initiatives,” claims Vladimir Troy, Vice President of Data Center Engineering, Operations, Enterprise Software, and Cloud Services at NVIDIA. “Together, we’re addressing the rapidly growing demands of AI factories — from kilowatt to megawatt-scale racks — and delivering future-proof solutions that maximise scalability, density, and efficiency.” For more from Schneider Electric, click here.

Connectors for data centres can improve energy efficiency
Energy costs can account for more than 50% of the total operating expenses of a data centre. To calculate the exact effect of power usage from connectors in data centres, HARTING has compared the power consumption of three different connector solutions in its independently accredited test laboratory. One of the connectors tested was the HARTING Han-Eco. The other two were CEE (IEC 60309) plugs from different manufacturers. The results showed that the Han-Eco connector reduced power wastage by up to 50% by using low-impedance contacts. These contacts reduce the power lost in connections and significantly improve the Power Usage Efficiency (PUE) of data centres. As a result, one hyperscale data centre with 15,000 racks could achieve annual power consumption savings of around £100,000. Download your free whitepaper now to learn how HARTING connectors can improve your power usage efficiency (PUE) and reduce the lifetime costs of operating a data centre. For more from HARTING, click here.

ZTE unveils AI data centre technologies
ZTE Corporation, a Chinese multinational telecommunications equipment and systems company, has debuted its latest AI-driven data centre technologies at Data Centre World Frankfurt 2025. At the heart of ZTE's exhibition was its vision for the "Elastic & Efficient AI Data Center." The display featured an integrated ecosystem of liquid-cooled cabinets, computing micro-modules, and containerised technology. With these, ZTE is hoping to be able to reduce data centre construction time by over 40%. The company also presented its upgraded power supply architecture. The power distribution system supports room-level and rack-level elastic power supply, seeking to cut down the physical footprint by 40% and achieve system efficiency levels as high as 98% in ECO mode. In tandem, its liquid cooling technologies have been designed to try to help bring down PUE to as low as 1.1. ZTE's AI-powered energy management system aims to leverage system-wide sensing, autonomous learning, and efficiency modelling to deliver real-time optimisation strategies. The company operates in more than 20 countries and has an end-to-end delivery model covering consulting, planning, design, construction, and ongoing maintenance. It uses digital tools like BIM for smart design, a global procurement network, and a team of over 200 certified professionals. Its AI-powered O&M platform, iDCIM, intends to enable predictive maintenance, helping - according to the company - reduce operational costs by up to 50%. ZTE's Intelligent Computing Infrastructure segment at DCW introduced the latest R5200 G6, R5300 G6, and R6500 G6 servers, alongside the presentation of AiCube, an AI computing solution tailored for edge scenarios. Sustainability took a prominent role at this year's exhibition. In its "Smart PV & ESS for a Green Future" section, ZTE presented its strategy for integrating renewable energy into data centre design. Through photovoltaic and energy storage systems, the company seeks to enable energy savings across the data centre life cycle - such as in Turkey, where ZTE deployed solar energy technology. "Our end-to-end solutions reflect a strategic focus on intelligence, sustainability, and global scalability," says Kan Jie, GM of Data Center Product at ZTE. "At Data Centre World Frankfurt 2025, we're showcasing how ZTE's innovations are helping enterprises accelerate their journey towards digital and green transformation." For more from ZTE, click here.

Asanti partners with Storm ID
Asanti Data Centres, a UK data centre provider, has today announced a strategic partnership with Storm ID, a digital transformation consultancy, to deliver cloud-aligned colocation hosting services for public sector organisations. This partnership combines Storm ID’s experience in public cloud technologies, service design, and AI-powered platforms with Asanti’s UK-wide network of edge data centres. Together, they aim to empower public sector bodies to modernise legacy systems, enhance digital services, and ensure compliance with UK data sovereignty requirements. “As our colocation partner, Asanti’s UK-wide infrastructure enhances our ability to deliver secure, resilient, hybrid hosting solutions to our clients,” says Mike Cashin, Director at Storm ID. “By combining our public cloud expertise with Asanti’s data centre expertise, we can provide public sector organisations with seamless access to modern, cloud-aligned, hybrid hosting solutions.” Storm ID previously helped with digital service delivery for the Scottish Government, NHS Scotland, and other public institutions, whilst Asanti’s Livingston data centre is Scotland’s only dual-power-fed data centre. “This partnership with Storm ID is a strong alignment of values and vision,” comments Stewart Laing, CEO of Asanti Data Centres. “Storm ID’s track record in delivering transformative digital services for the public sector speaks for itself. Coupled with our scalable, resilient infrastructure, we’re excited to help enable a new era of secure, hybrid hosting solutions for public organisations across the UK.” The collaboration will focus on enabling digital transformation within regulated and critical sectors, with an emphasis on hybrid hosting architectures that blend local colocation with public cloud scalability.

Vantage completes euro-based data centre ABS
Vantage Data Centers, a provider of hyperscale data centre campuses, has announced it has raised €640 million in securitised term notes, marking the first-ever euro-based securitisation of data centre assets in Continental Europe. The transaction includes an additional €80 million in unfunded Variable Funding Notes. The Class A-2 Notes are rated A- and the Class B Notes are rated BBB- by Standard & Poor’s and Scope Ratings. This transaction follows Vantage’s undertaking last year with the first-ever EMEA data centre ABS (Asset-Backed Securitisation) completed in British pound sterling. The notes will be used to refinance four data centres in Germany - two in Offenbach (Frankfurt) and two in Berlin - all of which are leased to hyperscale customers. The refinancing is part of Vantage’s wider efforts to expand its presence in the EMEA region and accelerate time-to-market to meet mounting demand for AI and cloud capacity. Surplus funds will be allocated towards capital expenditures and broader corporate initiatives. The notes have an anticipated five-year repayment date. “The issuance of the first euro-denominated ABS in the data centre sector marks a significant milestone in digital infrastructure financing. Having previously issued the first data centre ABS in both North America and EMEA (sterling-denominated), Vantage continues to showcase our innovative approach to capital markets and our ability to unlock new funding vehicles to fuel our global expansion,” says Rich Cosgray, Senior Vice President, Global Capital Markets for Vantage Data Centers. Vantage was represented by Clifford Chance, and the transaction was led by Barclays and Deutsche Bank as active Joint Lead Managers. It was supported by ING and Natixis as Joint Lead Managers and ABN Amro, Banco De Sabadell, SMBC, and Societe Generale as Co-Managers. Barclays acted as Sole Structuring Advisor and Sole Green Structuring Advisor, and the transaction achieved a Green Bond designation via a Second-Party Opinion (SPO) from Morningstar Sustainalytics. The funds raised will contribute to advancing the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) and aim to facilitate the innovation of next-generation sustainable solutions aimed at reducing Vantage’s environmental impact. Over the last 12 months, Vantage has raised €2.2 billion in new debt financing for its EMEA platform. For more from Vantage, click here.

FFT chooses Keepit for data backup
Keepit, a global provider of a cloud backup and recovery platform, today announced that it has been selected by the French Tennis Federation (FFT) to independently backup its Microsoft 365, Microsoft Entra ID, and Power BI data. The FFT chose Keepit as a sovereign backup solution, independent of major global cloud providers. The company is Danish and controls its entire hosting chain by operating its own cloud and data centres across Europe, the UK, Canada, Australia, and the US. Keepit's architecture reportedly met the FFT's requirements of security, independence, and business continuity. "Until three years ago, we had no backup solution for our cloud environments. My objective was clear: to identify a European service provider guaranteeing maximum independence", says Franck Labat, Technical Director at FFT. “Beyond this initial requirement, Keepit was able to meet additional needs that we hadn't anticipated: centralised, traceable archiving of PST files, unified management of all our data via a single platform, and, more recently, seamless integration of our directory as part of our complete migration to Entra ID.” The FFT, headquartered at Roland-Garros stadium, organises, coordinates, and promotes tennis for over 8,000 clubs throughout France. The FFT's operations also involve the management of a large number of seasonal employees as part of its event-driven activities, generating significant data flows to be processed and restored. To ensure consistent monitoring, the company needs to be able to recover data from people who have left, sometimes after short assignments, in order to pass it on to managers. The collaboration began in 2022, alongside SCC France, a partner of the FFT for over 15 years, with the initial aim of safeguarding Microsoft 365 environments. Since then, the partnership has gradually expanded to include Power BI and Microsoft Entra ID. FFT now plans to integrate any new Microsoft solution it adopts into the Keepit ecosystem. “We are particularly proud to have led this project alongside our partner SCC, offering the FFT an independent cloud backup and recovery platform that is simple to deploy and administer,” says Cyril VanAgt, Vice President Channel EMEA at Keepit. “We remain fully committed to supporting the next steps in the evolution of its cloud and Microsoft environments.” For more from Keepit, click here.



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