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TECH

Microsoft announces €2 billion AI investment in Spain

Tech giant Microsoft has announced investment in Spain worth almost €2 billion, with the funds earmarked for artificial intelligence technology and the creation of 'cloud' data centres.

Microsoft announces €2 billion AI investment in Spain
Photo: Pau BARRENA/AFP.

Microsoft is set to invest over $2 billion (€1.95 billion) in artificial intelligence technology (AI) in Spain over the next two years to promote digital innovation and the responsible use of AI, the company’s president said in a joint announcement with ministers.

The funds are intended to benefit both Spanish companies and public sector administration, as well as promote Spain as a European-wide digital hub.

The investment, which is the largest the tech giant has made in Spain, will fund work primarily within the National Artificial Intelligence Strategy framework and the National Cybersecurity Strategy.

The funds will help the extension of AI use into public administration, including the training of civil servants, as well as promoting the use of responsible AI and implementing warning systems against cyber attacks, something in which Microsoft will collaborate with the Spanish Agency for the Supervision of Artificial Intelligence (AESIA).

Microsoft’s President Brad Smith met with Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez in a meeting at La Moncloa, along with Minister for Digital Transformation, José Luis Escrivá, to announce the investment.

In a statement, the government said that “these strategic investments by Microsoft in Spain in data centres and R&D, which will be carried out under sustainability criteria, will contribute to turning our country into a hub of interconnectivity and digital infrastructure.”

READ ALSO: Spain to invest €11 billion to become Europe’s microchip factory

Microsoft will soon open a ‘cloud’ region of data centres in Madrid, and has announced that it will also build a so-called data centre campus in Aragón for European companies and public entities, aiming to secure Spain’s position as a European leader.

Speaking to Spanish daily El País, Smith said that the strategy is to provide Spain with the tools to successfully harness what many view as the inevitable AI revolution in the coming years.

Spain is already one of the countries where AI is most widely used, Smith said, but jobs are not yet being created to reflect that high usage.

“There are some things that are really interesting… Between Q3 and Q4 last year, we saw the use of generative AI by organisations across Spain increase by more than five times in one quarter,” Smith said.

“So we are literally seeing AI adoption explode across the Spanish economy. Our investment of $2.1 billion in just two years is trying to keep pace with the country’s needs.”

It is hoped that the investment can also help to modernise administrative processes and train civil servants in AI technology to increase their effectiveness and efficiency.

The funds will also be used to bolster national cybersecurity and the cyber-resilience of state departments, including early warning and response mechanisms to computer security incidents (that is to say, hacks or bugs) in government and public sector systems.

Microsoft also intends to help strengthen the cyber-resilience of private companies by providing information on potential threats and cyber-attacks coming from abroad.

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ECONOMY

Madrid approves sale of Vodafone’s Spanish unit

Spain's government has approved the sale of British mobile phone giant Vodafone's Spanish division to investment fund Zegona for up to €5.0 billion.

Madrid approves sale of Vodafone's Spanish unit

Digital Transformation Minister José Luis Escrivá said Madrid had given the green light because the London-based fund has committed to “a very substantial investment plan in the telecommunications sector over the medium term, in both fixed and mobile telephony”.

Vodafone announced in October that it had reached a deal to sell its Spanish business to Zegona, which was founded by two former Virgin Media executives, as part of its efforts to streamline its European operations under pressure from shareholders.

Under the terms of the deal the investment fund will pay Vodafone €4.1 billion ($4.4 billion) in cash, and up to 900 million shares in Zegona, which is listed in London.

The deal is expected to be completed at the end of May, Vodafone said in a statement.

The company said it now plants to start a €500-million share buyback programme on May 15th as part of its plans to return €2.0 billion to shareholders over 12 months.

In a further streamlining, Vodafone in June agreed to merge its British operations with Three UK, owned by Hong Kong-based CK Hutchison, to create Britain’s biggest operator with 27 million customers and accelerate rollout of faster 5G connectivity.

The group, which has more than 300 million mobile customers in Europe and Africa, is heavily focused on accelerating rollout of 5G in the UK.

At the end of 2022, Vodafone unveiled a huge deal with investment firms GIP and KKR to form a joint venture that would maintain its majority stake in European masts division Vantage Towers.

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