Nvidia and Deutsche Telekom Unveil €1B AI Factory in Munich | eWEEK

Nvidia and Deutsche Telekom Unveil €1B AI Factory in Munich

Deutsche Telekom CEO Tim Höttges and Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang. Source: Nvidia

Deutsche Telekom CEO Tim Höttges and Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang. Source: Nvidia

Written By
eWEEK Staff
eWEEK Staff
Nov 5, 2025
2 minute read
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It looks like Europe just fired back in the global AI race.

Tech giants Nvidia and Deutsche Telekom are building a €1 billion ($1.14 billion) artificial intelligence facility in Munich that aims to change how European companies tap into AI.

This “AI factory” could reshape Germany’s tech landscape and challenge the grip of US and Chinese AI infrastructure.

At the heart of it is data sovereignty, the idea that European companies get serious AI muscle while their sensitive data stays under European law. The idea is to pair Nvidia’s chips with Deutsche Telekom’s network backbone.

Nvidia founder and CEO Jensen Huang said, “These are factories, just like factories of cars and all the industrial factories of Germany, these are factories of intelligence.”

A numbers game

The facility will house over 1,000 Nvidia DGX B200 systems equipped with up to 10,000 Blackwell GPUs, enough compute to boost Germany’s total AI capacity by approximately 50%.

Construction begins in early 2026, with operations starting by the first quarter of that year. The project will be built as an extension of an existing data center in Munich.

For perspective, this build targets 10,000 GPUs, while the recently announced Stargate project in Texas plans to use approximately 450,000 GPUs. Europe is opting for tighter security and regional control, not just a raw horsepower contest.

European ambitions

The “Industrial AI Cloud” is about more than racks and cooling. It changes how European firms adopt AI, from product design to advanced robotics, while keeping to strict data security standards that comply with German sovereignty laws.

Agile robots will deploy specialized bots to install server racks at the facility, while Perplexity plans to use the infrastructure to provide localized AI services to German users and companies.

SAP will contribute its Business Technology platform and applications, rounding out an ecosystem aimed at local demand for AI under local rules.

European tech leaders have been increasingly vocal about reducing dependence on foreign infrastructure providers, and the build positions Germany inside the EU’s broader €200 billion plan to triple AI capacity over the next five to seven years. Momentum meets policy.

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New contender

For years, the US and China have maintained clear leads. The Munich build is Europe’s strongest swing at becoming a third pole in AI infrastructure, leaning on the continent’s industrial base and privacy rules as an edge.

With operations beginning in just over a year, this site becomes a test case.

Can Europe really challenge Silicon Valley and Chinese heavyweights on infrastructure, while keeping data under local lock and key?

Companies now have real choices about where they deploy AI and how they guard their data, a shift toward AI that is regionalized, practical, and a little more human.

Anthropic has partnered with business transformation firm Cognizant to bring the AI company’s Claude model family to enterprises at scale.

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