New Straits Times

‘Cook not keen on Irish plan’

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DUBLIN: A planned US$1 billion (RM4.23 billion) Apple data centre is in doubt after Irish Prime Minister Leo Varadkar said the United States company’s chief executive Tim Cook would no longer commit to it, adding that Dublin would do whatever necessary to get it built.

Apple announced plans in February 2015 to build the facility in a rural location in the west of Ireland to take advantage of green energy sources nearby, but the project faced a two-year delay due to planning objections.

In a meeting on Thursday, Cook did not commit to going ahead with it, said Varadkar.

“We didn’t get a start date, or a definite commitment or anything like that,” he said, adding that he had told Cook that the government would do “anything within our power” to facilitate the resumption of the project.

Ireland relies on foreign multinatio­nal companies like Apple for the creation of one in every 10 jobs across the economy and sees major investment­s, such as data centres, as a means of securing their presence in the country.

A similar Apple centre announced at the same time in Denmark is due to begin operations this year and Apple in July announced it would build second European Union data centre there.

The government said it was considerin­g amending its planning laws to include data centres as strategic infrastruc­ture, thus allowing them to get through the planning process much more quickly. Reuters

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