Business Standard

‘Facebook effect’ turns Swedish steel town into tech hot-spot

- REUTERS 8 May

Facebook will double the size of its data centre in Sweden’s northern city of Lulea, raising its total investment­s in the region to about 8.7 billion crowns ($987 million), the company said on Monday. The campus, opened in 2013, is the first Facebook data centre set up outside the United States.

The expansion will make it one of the largest data centre sin the world, said Node Pole, an investment hub, partly owned by utility Vat ten fall, which seeks to promote investment­s in power-hungry data centres.

Sweden and its Nordic neighb ours, with cheap electricit­y and low temperatur­es, are attractive for data centres, with many Silicon valley giants and cryp to currency miners rushing to move in.

Facebook will add a third building to the existing two at the Lu lea data centre, which Vat ten fall supplies electricit­y to.

“This third building will measure nearly 50,000 square meters, and we anticipate will start serving traffic in early 2021,” Facebook said in a statement.

The expansion will increase the social media giant’ s total cumulative investment in the region to around 8.7 billion cr owns, it added, without disc losing the exact cost of the new project.

Lu lea’ s mayor Ni kl as Nordstrom said the new building would double the size of the data centre to more than 100,000 square meters (1.1 million square feet) and double its capacity of operations.

The current two-building campus consumes more than one percent of Sweden’ s total power production and that will also double, he told

Reuters. The expansion will create about 100 new Facebook jobs at the centre, which currently employs fewer than 200 people, while its constructi­on will create about 1,000 temporary jobs, Nordstrom said.

 ??  ?? Tom Furlong ( right), vice president of site operations at Facebook, and Joel Kjellgren, data centre manager, at Facebook’s server hall in Lulea
Tom Furlong ( right), vice president of site operations at Facebook, and Joel Kjellgren, data centre manager, at Facebook’s server hall in Lulea

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