Iceland positioned to become international datacenter hub

A new independent study conducted by BroadGroup reveals that Iceland is well positioned to become an international datacenter hub. The study results reveal that Iceland is a highly attractive location for a datacenter.

On the key issue of power, encompassing everything from costs to quality to regulation, Iceland scores more highly than leading global datacenter locations such as the US, UK, Sweden, Singapore and Hong Kong.


Iceland power costs can be half those in Scandinavia, and significantly more competitive than other European countries. Iceland’s power costs remain very likely to stay much lower than other countries, particularly given the opportunity to cap such prices for ten years or even longer for greenfield projects.


Power reliability and quality are extremely high. Iceland has a long history with a key group of power-intensive users already – the aluminium smelters. Such users, including global leaders such as Rio Tinto and Alcoa, can have requirements of >400MW and have expanded their sites in Iceland due to the strong reliability and availability.


Furthermore, power in Iceland is 100% green. Iceland is one of few countries in Western Europe with large quantities of competitively priced, renewable carbon neutral electricity. Setting Iceland apart from most countries, it produces electricity using exclusively hydropower, geothermal energy and onshore wind. These are sustainable, environmentally “green” resources with zero carbon trade-offs. This makes it an ideal location for addressing corporate responsibility considerations.


“With datacenter costs closely linked to power prices, and power accounting for typically 20-40% of operating costs, it is not surprising that the availability of power ranks highly in the choice of location with an investment decision based on a period of at least 15 years,” commented Steve Wallage, managing director of BroadGroup Consulting.


“Some locations talk about factors such as cheap energy or strong connectivity, but the reality for most datacenter users is that they need all basic issues to be in place. This includes telecoms, power, reliability, taxation and business environment, and the legal and regulatory framework. Iceland has all these factors in place.”

First of its kind research, in partnership with Canalys, offers deep insights into some of the...
According to a recently published report from Dell’Oro Group, worldwide data center capex is...
Managed service providers (MSPs) are increasing their spending by as much as 70% to meet growing...
Coromatic, part of the E.ON group and the leading provider of robust critical infrastructure...
Datto’s Global State of the MSP: Trends and Forecasts for 2024 underscores the importance of...
Park Place Technologies has appointed Ian Anderson as Senior Director, Channel Sales, EMEA.
Node4 has passed the ISO 27017 and ISO 27018 audits, reinforcing its dedication to data security,...
Park Place Technologies has acquired Xuper Limited, an IT solutions provider based in Derby, UK.