EcoDataCenter Secures €600M From Deutsche Bank for AI Data Center Expansion

EcoDataCenter has secured €600 million ($703.5 million) in debt financing from Deutsche Bank to accelerate its AI data center expansion across Sweden.

The deal, announced recently, is another major investment milestone for the Stockholm-based company. Combined with previous funding rounds, EcoDataCenter and its owner Areim have now raised €1.8 billion since 2023 to fuel their aggressive expansion plans.

Deutsche Bank Backs Sweden’s Green Data Center Vision

Deutsche Bank provided the financing through its Private Credit and Infrastructure unit, targeting EcoDataCenter’s large-scale facilities in Falun and Borlänge, north of Stockholm. These sites will host AI workloads and other compute-intensive applications for global technology companies.

CEO Peter Michelson, a former Ericsson executive, told Reuters the funding provides a two-year runway for current expansion plans. However, he expects continued market demand will drive further growth and capital needs.

“If we were to stop building tomorrow, we would be a highly profitable company, but we obviously have ambitions for much more than that.”, Michelson said.

AI Demand Drives Data Center Investment Frenzy

The funding announcement reflects the explosive growth in AI infrastructure investment. According to Markets and Markets, the global AI data center market reached $167.76 billion in 2024 and is projected to hit $933.76 billion by 2030.

Goldman Sachs Research forecasts data center demand will grow about 50% to 92 GW by 2027, with a 17% compound annual growth rate. Deloitte estimates AI data center power demand could grow more than thirtyfold by 2035, from 4 GW in 2024 to 123 GW.

Sweden has emerged as a prime destination for data center investment. The country’s reliable power grid, abundant renewable energy, and strong connectivity infrastructure have attracted major tech companies including Microsoft, Meta, and Alphabet to expand their operations there.

Nordic Region Becomes Europe’s Data Center Hotspot

Research and Markets projects Sweden’s data center market will nearly double from $2 billion in 2024 to $3.8 billion by 2030, indicating an 11.29% compound annual growth rate. The Nordic region offers several competitive advantages including:

  • Access to abundant renewable energy sources
  • Cold climate reducing cooling costs
  • Stable political and economic environment
  • Advanced digital infrastructure and connectivity
  • Skilled technical workforce

The region has become particularly attractive for sustainable data center operations, with companies able to significantly reduce their carbon footprint compared to other European markets.

EcoDataCenter Attracts Major AI Players

EcoDataCenter has built an impressive client roster since opening its first facility in 2019. The company serves German translation startup DeepL, automotive giant BMW, and has partnered with specialized cloud provider CoreWeave.

In 2024, EcoDataCenter announced a partnership with CoreWeave to build one of Europe’s largest AI training clusters. The facility will host a Nvidia Blackwell SuperPod for DeepL, featuring chips highly coveted by enterprises for training and running large AI models.

These partnerships demonstrate the company’s ability to attract AI applications requiring massive computational resources and ultra-low latency infrastructure.

Expansion Plans Target 600MW AI Mega-Campus

The company is developing a 600MW AI mega-campus designed to support large-scale AI training and inference workloads. This facility will position EcoDataCenter among Europe’s largest AI infrastructure providers.

The expansion comes at a critical time as European companies and governments seek to reduce dependence on US and Chinese AI infrastructure. The European Commission has unveiled plans to provide $20 billion in funding for AI data centers to compete with global leaders.

Market Momentum Continues Building

The latest funding round follows EcoDataCenter owner Areim’s €450 million capital raise in March 2025. That funding came from leading institutional investors specifically targeting sustainable data center infrastructure.

Industry experts expect continued investment momentum as AI applications become more sophisticated and require increasingly powerful computing resources. The combination of growing AI adoption and European digital sovereignty initiatives creates favorable conditions for regional infrastructure providers.

EcoDataCenter’s success in attracting major debt financing from Deutsche Bank indicates strong institutional confidence in the Nordic data center market and the company’s execution capabilities.

The funding announcement positions EcoDataCenter to capitalize on surging AI infrastructure demand while maintaining its commitment to sustainable operations in one of Europe’s most attractive data center markets.

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