The Prague Post - France quietly catches rivals in battle for data centre supremacy

EUR -
AED 4.25245
AFN 81.634891
ALL 98.875812
AMD 447.058493
ANG 2.07228
AOA 1061.833725
ARS 1356.394785
AUD 1.793194
AWG 2.087191
AZN 1.966047
BAM 1.97426
BBD 2.336245
BDT 141.513209
BGN 1.956338
BHD 0.436897
BIF 3404.35022
BMD 1.157942
BND 1.496512
BOB 8.024133
BRL 6.364088
BSD 1.15712
BTN 100.367782
BWP 15.647514
BYN 3.786656
BYR 22695.668133
BZD 2.324263
CAD 1.59026
CDF 3331.400129
CHF 0.941336
CLF 0.028609
CLP 1097.845556
CNY 8.313446
CNH 8.310505
COP 4729.036156
CRC 584.573584
CUC 1.157942
CUP 30.68547
CVE 110.728203
CZK 24.838329
DJF 205.789603
DKK 7.459064
DOP 68.839617
DZD 150.685992
EGP 58.681069
ERN 17.369134
ETB 155.8305
FJD 2.614576
FKP 0.859753
GBP 0.856523
GEL 3.149574
GGP 0.859753
GHS 11.926544
GIP 0.859753
GMD 82.791874
GNF 10021.990287
GTQ 8.90224
GYD 242.076655
HKD 9.089617
HNL 30.219566
HRK 7.535072
HTG 151.870049
HUF 402.882599
IDR 19076.867008
ILS 3.989238
IMP 0.859753
INR 99.944485
IQD 1516.90435
IRR 48778.317571
ISK 142.403553
JEP 0.859753
JMD 184.444636
JOD 0.821004
JPY 169.173627
KES 149.94903
KGS 101.219904
KHR 4654.928134
KMF 495.005897
KPW 1042.147474
KRW 1582.964823
KWD 0.354226
KYD 0.964228
KZT 604.358841
LAK 24988.394146
LBP 103751.626118
LKR 348.16853
LRD 231.237192
LSL 20.831717
LTL 3.419102
LVL 0.700428
LYD 6.293449
MAD 10.5778
MDL 19.879136
MGA 5144.166781
MKD 61.547345
MMK 2431.403661
MNT 4149.016195
MOP 9.356105
MRU 45.993364
MUR 52.906946
MVR 17.838163
MWK 2010.187335
MXN 22.148598
MYR 4.92415
MZN 74.06197
NAD 20.831433
NGN 1795.400311
NIO 42.578124
NOK 11.681495
NPR 160.588652
NZD 1.937476
OMR 0.445227
PAB 1.157034
PEN 4.169738
PGK 4.767579
PHP 66.241821
PKR 328.450089
PLN 4.274187
PYG 9235.354486
QAR 4.215492
RON 5.046539
RSD 117.250882
RUB 90.897492
RWF 1658.752276
SAR 4.344746
SBD 9.657735
SCR 16.394774
SDG 695.344583
SEK 11.118926
SGD 1.487728
SHP 0.909961
SLE 25.995777
SLL 24281.47429
SOS 661.768082
SRD 44.975657
STD 23967.066734
SVC 10.12467
SYP 15055.425145
SZL 20.831062
THB 37.922235
TJS 11.426188
TMT 4.052798
TND 3.384954
TOP 2.712013
TRY 45.977985
TTD 7.86363
TWD 34.377334
TZS 3120.654236
UAH 48.489901
UGX 4175.038382
USD 1.157942
UYU 47.302297
UZS 14460.209095
VES 119.970715
VND 30355.456128
VUV 138.845179
WST 3.194311
XAF 662.157027
XAG 0.032074
XAU 0.000344
XCD 3.129397
XDR 0.822142
XOF 660.603861
XPF 119.331742
YER 280.974428
ZAR 20.710494
ZMK 10422.873909
ZMW 26.884732
ZWL 372.856933
  • CMSC

    0.0900

    22.314

    +0.4%

  • CMSD

    0.0250

    22.285

    +0.11%

  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    69.04

    0%

  • SCS

    0.0400

    10.74

    +0.37%

  • RELX

    0.0300

    53

    +0.06%

  • RIO

    -0.1400

    59.33

    -0.24%

  • GSK

    0.1300

    41.45

    +0.31%

  • NGG

    0.2700

    71.48

    +0.38%

  • BP

    0.1750

    30.4

    +0.58%

  • BTI

    0.7150

    48.215

    +1.48%

  • BCC

    0.7900

    91.02

    +0.87%

  • JRI

    0.0200

    13.13

    +0.15%

  • VOD

    0.0100

    9.85

    +0.1%

  • BCE

    -0.0600

    22.445

    -0.27%

  • RYCEF

    0.1000

    12

    +0.83%

  • AZN

    -0.1200

    73.71

    -0.16%

France quietly catches rivals in battle for data centre supremacy
France quietly catches rivals in battle for data centre supremacy / Photo: Thomas SAMSON - AFP/File

France quietly catches rivals in battle for data centre supremacy

At the end of a narrow suburban street north of Paris, a giant structure shrouded in a skin of mesh and steel looks like a football stadium, but is in fact a vast data centre.

Text size:

Paris Digital Park, which towers over four-storey apartment blocks and is owned by US firm Digital Realty, is one of more than 70 centres that ring the French capital -- more than a third of the country's total.

The government is pushing hard to expand an industry seen as the backbone of the digital economy, playing catch-up with established hubs like London and Frankfurt, and is so far avoiding the backlash that has slowed development elsewhere.

"The Paris region is the fourth largest hub in the world for content exchanges," Fabrice Coquio, President of Digital Realty France, told AFP on a recent tour of his firm's campus.

The capital region's data centre industry is already worth 1.2 billion euros ($1.3 billion), according to specialist consultancy Structure Research.

And Coquio, like everyone else in the industry, believes artificial intelligence is about to supercharge it.

He said the massive computing needs of AI would power a "second wave" of expansion for data centres, after the shift to cloud computing fuelled the first wave.

Jerome Totel of French firm Data4 said there were virtually no AI-ready data centres in France right now. But by 2030 data capacity would double in France, with between 30 and 40 percent of it dedicated to the technology, according to a recent report by trade group Datacenter.

That expansion will suck up power and land on a dramatic scale -- Coquio sees electricity usage at data centres doubling in the next four years.

But unlike in other parts of the world, there are few dissenting voices in France.

- 'Isolated' protests -

Concerns over energy and land use pushed Amsterdam and Dublin to restrict licences for new data centres -- helping Paris overtake the Dutch capital in the race for market share.

Frankfurt has clamped down on data centre sprawl with new zoning and energy rules.

And public protests have been seen recently from the Netherlands to the heart of the global industry in the US state of Virginia.

Yet in France, one of the few concerted efforts to block a centre was back in 2015 when Coquio's firm -- then known as Interxion -- had to overcome local protests and legal challenges to an earlier building.

Amazon's data centre arm, AWS, also backed off from a planned centre in 2021 after facing pushback in Bretigny-sur-Orge, in the south of Paris.

"Protests have existed and still exist, but they are very ad hoc and isolated," said Clement Marquet, a researcher at Paris-based engineering school Mines.

He said the objections had not gone beyond NIMBY, or "not in my backyard".

Those who had tried to widen the issue to the broader climate costs of digital developments "failed to bring people together over time and eventually gave up", said Marquet.

- Faster planning -

France already has some advantages that explain why data centre developments are not as divisive as in other countries.

It is much bigger than the Netherlands or Ireland, with much more free land and a less strained power grid.

Added to this, national laws largely restrict data centre companies to building on land already in industrial use.

Coquio stresses that his new Paris campus is built on a former Airbus helicopter plant.

Keeping developments mostly out of the public eye, tucked away next to motorways, in former factories, and on wasteland, has helped keep the public neutral about the centres.

However, this balance could be about to shift.

Before President Emmanuel Macron called snap elections in June that his centrist party lost, resulting in a hung parliament, his government had been trying to push through a law that would allow large data centres to be classified as projects of major national interest.

The idea would be to speed up planning processes and connection to the power grid.

Marquet said France should be moving in the opposite direction and putting more thought into planning.

"In the long term, we all need to think hard about the ecological consequences of digital growth in general," he said, labelling the current habit of ignoring climate concerns as "absurd".

But with the ramped-up computing needs of AI combining with looser regulation, the transformation of France's post-industrial suburbs looks set to continue apace.

P.Benes--TPP