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Spain’s Aragón is Europe’s new cloud storage oasis (but not everyone is happy about it)

The world's biggest technology firms are investing billions in cloud storage facilities in the northeastern Spanish region of Aragón, drawn to its abundance of renewable energy sources. Some critics fear its environmental impact.

Spain's Aragón is Europe's new cloud storage oasis (but not everyone is happy about it)
This photograph taken on July 11, 2024, shows the Amazon Web Services (AWS) data center in El Burgo de Ebro, near Zaragoza. (Photo by Valentin BONTEMPS / AFP)

While local authorities hope to reap the economic benefits of the ever-growing data demands of the artificial intelligence (AI) boom, environmentalists have criticised the vast quantities of water and power that data storage consumes.

Until recently, Aragón “was not on the map of global connectivity. But today everyone knows where it is,” said Manuel Giménez, executive director of an association grouping 170 data centre firms.

At the end of May, Amazon said it was investing €15.7 billion ($17 billion) in the region through its AWS cloud computing division to expand its three existing data centres in Aragón, set up since 2022.

In early July, Microsoft said it was investing €2.2 billion in a huge data centre project, raising its total investment in the region to 6.7 billion euros.

And Spanish media reports said Meta, the parent company of Instagram and Facebook, would soon follow suit.

These investments are part of a strategy by big tech companies to ramp up their storage capacities to meet the incessant demand for generative artificial intelligence, which has significant data requirements.

‘Europe’s Virginia’

“This is a great opportunity and we must make the most of it,” said María del Mar Vaquero, the Aragón region’s deputy leader.

She believes that Aragón’s success in the field is due to plenty of cheaply available land and good links to Spain’s economic centres in Madrid, Barcelona and the northern Basque Country.

READ ALSO: Why are the Basque Country and Catalonia so rich compared to the rest of Spain?

This is complemented by the vast array of solar and wind farms dotted across its sunny but sparsely populated territory.

For Amazon, the fact that all its power needs can be met “with 100 percent renewable sources” helps its sustainability goals, it said, while pointing to the “institutional confidence” offered by the Aragonese authorities.

The regional government has created a dedicated department so that “red tape will not be an obstacle for these types of projects” and will establish “legal security” for companies, Vaquero said.

The aim is to convert the region into a “European Virginia”, she added, referring to the eastern US state that has established itself as a global data centre hub.

Aragón is a generally dry region that’s prone to drought, although in the past year there has been enough rainfall to lower the risk. (Photo by PIERRE-PHILIPPE MARCOU / AFP)

Environmental impact

However, the spread of data centres in the region also has detractors.

Ecologists say such installations are very costly in terms of electricity to run the equipment and water to cool them down.

While “it’s difficult to have exact figures, we do know that consumption levels are huge”, said activist Aurora Gómez, warning of the risks of “uncontrolled” development.

Gómez is part of a protest platform called “Tu nube seca mi río” – “Your cloud is drying up my river” – flagging the environmental impact of data centres.

“Spain is going to be one of the worst-hit countries in terms of climate change and desertification. We have to be very careful,” she said.

Other critics cast doubt on the economic benefits of these centres, which Giménez’s data centre association rejects.

“The positive impact of the data centre industry on GDP and employment is obvious,” Giménez said, calling it “even larger than that of the aeronautical industry”.

With fierce competition for investment between Spain’s 17 regions, the Aragonese government has launched a huge 42-hectare (104-acre) technology park project on the outskirts of Zaragoza.

Although it has the sector heavyweights in mind, it is also designed to meet the needs of start-ups and public research institutions.

“In Aragón, the leading sectors have traditionally been the agrifood business, logistics and the automotive industry,” said Vaquero.

But with investment pouring in, her vision is an Aragón where technology becomes “a motor for economic transformation”.

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WORKING IN SPAIN

Record 21 million workers: Spain’s unemployment rate falls as tourism booms

Spain's unemployment rate dropped in the second quarter, official data showed Friday, as a continued tourism boom added jobs in the services sector.

Record 21 million workers: Spain's unemployment rate falls as tourism booms

The jobless rate fell to 11.3 percent between March and June in the eurozone’s fourth-largest economy, down from 12.3 percent in the previous three months, national statistics institute INE said in a statement.

The services sector saw the biggest drop in the number of job seekers with nearly 200,000 fewer than in the first quarter but unemployment also dropped in other sectors, including construction, industry and agriculture, it added.

READ ALSO: ‘No longer black sheep’ – Tourism boosts Spain an other ‘Club Med’ economies

The total number of people employed in Spain rose by 434,700 people in the second quarter to hit a new record of 21.68 million.

Socialist Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez said on X that “Spain is making progress by breaking employment records.

“We continue to work to make this the legislature of full employment. We are going in the right direction,” he posted on the social network.

Spain’s unemployment rate jumped in 2008 as a result of the financial crisis following the bursting of a real estate bubble.

It hit a peak of around 27 percent in early 2013.

The jobless rate has dropped as tourism boomed following the end of Covid travel restrictions and labour reforms were passed to reduce the number of temporary contracts.

Nevertheless, Spain’s unemployment rate is still one of the highest in the eurozone.

Spain, the world’s second most visited country after France, received a record 85 million tourists last year, with the figure expected to hit a new record in 2024.

READ ALSO: The best websites to look for jobs in Spain

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