Facebook is reportedly considering building a £200 million (T$10bn) data centre in Taiwan, a data centre that would be the first build of its kind for Facebook in the Asia-Pacific region.
A Taiwanese government spokesperson, Magistrate Wei Ming-ku of Changhua County, told Reuters: “We’ve made all-out efforts to ensure sufficient supply of water and electricity … We hope they will come.”
Changhua County is also the home to Google’s Taiwanese data centre. Google pumped an extra £44 million into the data centre earlier this year, having initially spent £400 million on the 37 acre site in 2011.
According to Wei, the proposed data centre would need 6 acres of land, but space for up to 20 acres would be reserved for future expansion.
In a statement to Reuters, a Facebook spokesperson said: “As a global company working to connect billions of people around the world, we are always evaluating potential sites for new data centres, but we don’t have anything to announce at this time.”
Amid intense competition from Huawei and others, Apple has again slashed the price of its…
Damning ruling by British judge, after he rules that self-proclaimed bitcoin inventor lied 'repeatedly' to…
High Court rules Wikileaks founder Julian Assange can appeal against extradition to the US, despite…
Regulatory filing last week shows Elon Musk's Tesla is cutting another 600 jobs in California,…
Weeks after seeking feedback on Microsoft's partnership with Mistral AI, UK regulator says it does…
Seeking collaboration on AI regulation, UK's AI Safety Institute to cross Atlantic and will open…