The tech giant will invest billions of dollars in this European country.

Donald Trump's state visit to the UK, which begins on Tuesday, will, in addition to its political nature, also have an economic dimension.
Together with the President of the United States, a very large group of CEOs of American companies, especially from the new technologies industry, interested in developing their business on the islands, is coming to London.
According to global agencies, several contracts will be signed during the two-day visit, and the total amount of declared investments exceeds USD 10 billion.
Last week, Nvidia and OpenAI announced the planned signing of an agreement with the British company Nscale Global Holdings Ltd. The agreement is to build data centers worth over a billion dollars.
American technology companies are betting on Great BritainThese decisions result from the demand of local partners for cloud services provided by American corporations and hence the need to invest in data centers.
Similar goals are pursued by Google, a company from the Alphabet Group, which has declared that it will allocate $6.8 billion to build a data center in Waltham Cross near London.
Growing customer demand for internet search engine services, Google Maps application support, and Google Cloud services has forced new investments.
Google will use only green electricityThe Waltham Cross center will utilize air-cooling technology, significantly reducing water consumption. Recycling heated process air will provide heat to nearby homes and small businesses.
Google also intends to sign an agreement with Shell to provide stable power grids and renewable energy to its facilities. Green energy will account for 95% of its consumption by 2026.

Journalist, graduate of political science at the Faculty of Law and Administration of the Jagiellonian University. Associated with the media for over 40 years. After graduating in 1982, he worked on the editorial staff of "Gazeta Krakowska" and "Kurier Polski." A member of the editorial team of "Przegląd Techniczny." He has published articles in "Student," "Przekrój," and "Życie Literackie." Since the economic and political transformation, he has been associated with Reuters as a correspondent in Krakow for over 20 years. For the next three years, he conducted practical classes with students at the Institute of Journalism, Media, and Social Communication of the Jagiellonian University. Since December 2021, he has joined the PTWP Group and works for the WNP.PL portal. His main professional interests include economics and politics at the global level and the participation of Polish business in this field, particularly companies listed on the Warsaw Stock Exchange. Winner of the "Ostra Pióra" award, granted for "spreading economic education" by the BCC, as well as the Golden Pear - a journalistic award of the Małopolska Branch of the Association of Journalists of the Republic of Poland.
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