Apple to set up high-tech data hubs in northern Europe

SHARE Apple to set up high-tech data hubs in northern Europe

HELSINKI — Apple is investing $1.92 billion in high-tech data centers in Denmark and Ireland that will be powered by renewable energy, in its largest such project in Europe to date, the company said Monday.

The hubs, to begin operations in 2017, will power data for Apple Inc.’s online services, including iTunes Store, App Store, iMessage, Maps and Siri voice services.

Apple said it has increased operations in Europe, spending more than $8.8 billion on European companies and suppliers last year and supporting some 670,000 jobs in the region. Its own employees grew by 2,000 and number 18,300 people in 19 European countries.

The technology giant joins Microsoft, Google and Facebook in building data centers in northern Europe, where the colder climate helps save on equipment cooling costs.

Apple CEO Tim Cook described the centers as “some of our most advanced green building designs yet.” They will use renewable energy, including wind power.

In Ireland, Apple will recover land previously used for growing and harvesting non-native trees and restore native trees to a local forest, providing an outdoor education site for local schools and a walking trail.

The Danish center will be located next to one of the country’s largest electrical substations, designed to capture excess heat from equipment in the data hub and conduct it into the district heating system to warm homes in the area.

The data centers will be based in central Denmark’s Jutland and Athenry, County Galway, in Ireland.

The Latest
Protesters’ demands have focused on divestment — demanding universities cut ties with Israel and businesses supporting the war in Gaza.
El concierto íntimo contó con presentaciones de artistas locales fusionando géneros musicales el fin de semana del Cinco de Mayo.
Illinois should treat its seniors more fairly, since most have stellar driving records, a reader from Deerfield writes.
Multiple rounds of storms accompanied by strong winds and hail are expected throughout the day Tuesday, the National Weather Service said.
The city has offered no substantial plan to either purchase the station or propose an alternate site before Greyhound’s lease ends in October, according to the report by DePaul University’s Chaddick Institute for Metropolitan Development. “There could be a real mess for our city if no action is taken,” said Joe Schwieterman, one of the authors.