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Apple is spending $2 billion on new European data centers

Apple announced earlier today that it will be investing nearly $2 billion in two new European data centers which will be located in Denmark and Ireland. These data centers will power Apple’s services, such as iMessage and Siri, for users in Europe. Both data centers are expected to be operational sometime in 2017 and are actually Apple’s largest project in Europe to date. 

Apple’s cloud is getting bigger. The company announced today that it will spend more than $1.9 billion (€1.7 billion) on two new data centers in Europe. They’ll be built in Galway, Ireland and Denmark’s Jutland to power Apple’s services for its European customers, including Siri, iMessage, Maps and the iTunes Store. That expenditure makes it Apple’s largest project in Europe to date. Each facility will measure 166,000 square meters (almost 1.8 million square feet), and they’re expected to come online in 2017. Like the company’s other data centers, the new European facilities will be run on renewable energy sources. Apple will also use them to give back to the community – the center in Denmark will be set up to capture excess heat and use that to warm nearby homes, while the Irish data center will be used to provide an outdoor education space for local schools and a public walking trail.

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Written by Chastity Mansfield

I'm a writer, an amateur designer, and a collector of trinkets that nobody else wants. You can find me on Noozeez, and Twitter.

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