Medicine Hat News

New Facebook data centre coming to Ohio

- JULIE CARR SMYTH

NEW ALBANY, Ohio Facebook will invest $750 million in a new data centre in central Ohio, the company announced Tuesday — marking another boost for the state’s growing technology sector.

The world’s biggest social media company joined Republican Gov. John Kasich and a host of other dignitarie­s to announce its 10th data centre will be on a 345-acre site in New Albany, just northeast of Columbus.

The 970,000-squarefoot facility will be powered exclusivel­y with renewable energy. It is expected to employ 100 people to start and to begin providing services in 2019.

Rachel Peterson, the company's director of data centre strategy and developmen­t, said several factors attracted Facebook to the location, including fiber and power infrastruc­ture, government support, livability and the availabili­ty of high-tech talent.

“We look at that community fit and how we’re going to live and work in a community,” she said. “We not only live there, we work there, too. We hire there locally. So we want to make sure there’s a strong fit.”

She said the availabili­ty of renewable energy sources, including wind, solar and hydro, was critical to the decision — a factor underlined by Kasich, who has pushed back against legislativ­e efforts to turn back the state’s alternativ­e energy requiremen­ts.

“It is critical that we continue developing the renewables, because, believe me, at the end of the day, if the Facebooks and the Googles and the PayPals and the Amazons think that we are not committed to renewable energy, they will not come here. Period, end of story,” he said.

Facebook has been adding data centres in the U.S. and internatio­nally to handle the growing number of photos, videos and additional digital content it must process from its 2 billion users. The Ohio project was code-named Sidecat as it moved through the successful applicatio­n process for $37 million in state tax incentives.

U.S. Rep. Pat Tiberi, whose district will house the facility, said it’s “incredibly important.”

“It continues to show not just the Silicon Valley, but job creators all over the country, that, hey, you know what, something must be happening in Ohio,” the Republican congressma­n said, noting the hope that a synergy is beginning to build.

Amazon, the e-commerce giant, launch three cloud-computing data centre sites in central Ohio just last year. The company invested about $1 billion in centres in New Albany and two other Columbus suburbs, Dublin and Hilliard.

Kasich said Tuesday’s announceme­nt shows Ohio is diversifyi­ng its economy beyond its heavy reliance on manufactur­ing. He hopes the growing number of tech jobs entice younger workers to move to or remain in Ohio, whose population growth has stagnated as average ages rise.

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