The National - News

Damac’s digital unit and Vodafone set to invest $100m in new Turkey data centre

- ALVIN R CABRAL

Edgnex Data Centres by Damac and British telecoms operator Vodafone are investing $100 million in a new data centre project in Turkey, aimed at boosting the country’s digital transforma­tion and economy.

The data centre, which will be built in Turkey’s third most populous city of Izmir, will have a capacity of 6 megawatts and is expected to be completed by 2025, the companies said yesterday.

It will offer “end-to-end services” and be positioned as a “one-stop-shop”, connecting to Europe through terrestria­l and submarine cables.

The centre “will serve specifical­ly to content creators, wholesale service providers and businesses in need of disaster recovery centre services”, the statement said.

Turkey, which is introducin­g a broad digital transforma­tion strategy, is “exerting all efforts” to help the country “not only consume technology, but also produce technology by using its resources effectivel­y”, according to the government’s Digital Transforma­tion Office.

The project in Izmir will provide “essential digital infrastruc­ture for the growing market on Turkey’s western coast”, on the back of high demand for data centres in the Eastern Mediterran­ean region, Aqil Ali, vice chairman and board member of Edgnex Data Centres, said.

“Izmir [is] an ideal location to meet this need,” he said. “Our goal is to build global strategic partnershi­ps that will have a major effect on local digital economies and the collaborat­ion with Vodafone will result in a top-notch facility in a constantly evolving market.”

Remote working trends, largely set off by the Covid-19 pandemic, have led to increased data consumptio­n fuelling the adoption of cloud services.

The adoption of these services has increased in the Middle East amid the rise of technology savvy young consumers and an evolving digital landscape, underpinne­d by government­s’ efforts to develop the economy.

This has given data centre and cloud providers an incentive to tap into the potential being offered by the region.

Among the most notable global companies that have invested in the region are Microsoft, Amazon, Oracle, IBM and Alibaba Cloud, which have all opened cloud and data centres in the Middle East.

Izmir has seven data centres, tied with the capital Ankara and Bursa, while Istanbul has 40, data from Statista shows. Revenue in Turkey’s data centre market is projected to exceed $2 billion by 2028, from an estimated $1.62 billion this year, at a compound annual growth rate of 5.8 per cent, with network infrastruc­ture to comprise $1.28 billion this year alone, it added.

The global cloud computing market is expected to hit nearly $1.27 trillion by 2028, from an estimated $626.4 billion last year, expanding at an annual rate of 15 per cent, according to research firm Markets and Markets.

Engin Aksoy, chief executive of Vodafone Turkey, said the company plans to “grow exponentia­lly” over the next five years by investing in data centres, cloud solutions, cybersecur­ity, mobile private networks and the Internet of Things. “We believe that Turkey should take part in this rising economy. It remains crucial to invest in reliable and high-capacity data centres for cloud computing.”

The 6MW data centre in the city of Izmir is expected to be completed by next year

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