• Home
  • About
  • Events Calendar
  • Blueprint Guidelines
  • Privacy Policy
  • Manage Email Delivery
  • NextGenInfra.io
No Result
View All Result
Converge Digest
Monday, June 8, 2026
  • Home
  • About
  • Events Calendar
  • Blueprint Guidelines
  • Privacy Policy
  • Manage Email Delivery
  • NextGenInfra.io
No Result
View All Result
Converge Digest
No Result
View All Result

Home » Deutsche Telekom Looks to NVIDIA for €1B Industrial AI Cloud

Deutsche Telekom Looks to NVIDIA for €1B Industrial AI Cloud

November 6, 2025
in AI Infrastructure, Clouds and Carriers
A A

Deutsche Telekom, NVIDIA, and SAP are constructing one of Europe’s largest AI factories—a €1 billion “Industrial AI Cloud” that will deliver 0.5 exaflops of compute performance and increase Germany’s AI computing capacity by roughly 50 percent. The new facility, located in Munich, will house up to 10,000 NVIDIA Blackwell GPUs, including DGX B200 systems and RTX Pro servers, to support high-performance, sovereign AI computing for European industry.

Set to begin operations in Q1 2026, the AI factory will allow companies to train large language models, develop digital twins, and build robotics and industrial automation applications under full EU data compliance. Deutsche Telekom’s T-Systems division is providing the infrastructure and connectivity through its T Cloud, SAP is delivering its Business Technology Platform, and NVIDIA is contributing the GPU infrastructure and Omniverse software stack. Early partners include Siemens, EY, Agile Robots, Wandelbots, Quantum Systems, PhysicsX, and Perplexity AI.

The project underscores Germany’s push for AI sovereignty, with applications spanning mechanical engineering, manufacturing, logistics, and robotics. Agile Robots’ H10-W model will even assist in server installation at the Munich site. Perplexity AI plans to run inference directly within Germany to guarantee sovereign data handling. Deutsche Telekom estimates that about 20 percent of companies are already shifting critical workloads back from global hyperscalers to domestic infrastructure, reinforcing demand for local AI compute.

•  Location: Munich, Germany

•  Investment: €1 billion

•  Hardware: Up to 10,000 NVIDIA Blackwell GPUs (DGX B200 + RTX Pro)

•  Performance: 0.5 exaflops | 20 petabytes storage | 4 × 400 Gbps fiber links

•  Operational start: Q1 2026

•  Key partners: SAP, NVIDIA, Siemens, EY, Agile Robots, Wandelbots, Quantum Systems, PhysicsX, Perplexity AI

•  Focus areas: Digital twins, LLM training, industrial automation, robotics, sovereign AI inference

Tim Höttges, CEO of Deutsche Telekom, said:

“Mechanical engineering and industry have made this country strong. AI is a huge opportunity—it will help improve our products and strengthen our European strengths. In just six months, we turn an idea into real AI computing power, Made for Germany.”

🌐 Analysis: The Industrial AI Cloud signals Europe’s determination to build sovereign AI infrastructure independent of U.S. and Chinese hyperscalers. For Deutsche Telekom, it aligns national digital policy with its T Cloud strategy. For NVIDIA, it expands its Blackwell GPU footprint into sovereign markets, echoing its partnerships with Japan’s SoftBank and France’s AI sovereign clouds. SAP’s involvement anchors enterprise-scale adoption, while the Munich deployment sets a template for future AI gigafactories across the continent.

🌐 We’re tracking the latest developments in AI infrastructure. Follow our ongoing coverage at: https://convergedigest.com/category/ai-infrastructure/Attachment.tiff

Tags: Deutsche TelekomGermanyNvidia
ShareTweetShareSummarizeSummarize
Previous Post

Nebius Deploys NVIDIA Blackwell Ultra AI Infrastructure in the UK

Next Post

Nokia Bell Labs and KDDI Research Drive 6G

Jim Carroll

Jim Carroll

Editor and Publisher, Converge! Network Digest, Optical Networks Daily - Covering the full stack of network convergence from Silicon Valley

Related Posts

AI Infrastructure

NVIDIA Expands Korea AI Push

June 7, 2026
Vera Rubin Cluster
AI Infrastructure

NVIDIA Vera Rubin Enters Full Production 

May 31, 2026
All

NVIDIA Adds In-Silicon Security to Vera BlueField-4 STX 

May 31, 2026
Clouds and Carriers

Deutsche Telekom and SAP to Build Sovereign AI for Germany

May 28, 2026
Financials

NVIDIA Networking Revenue Jumps 199%

May 20, 2026
Financials

Deutsche Telekom Raises 2026 Outlook on T-Mobile US Momentum

May 13, 2026
Next Post

Nokia Bell Labs and KDDI Research Drive 6G

Categories

  • 5G / 6G / Wi-Fi
  • AI Infrastructure
  • All
  • Automotive Networking
  • Blueprints
  • Clouds and Carriers
  • Data Centers
  • Enterprise
  • Explainer
  • Feature
  • Financials
  • Last Mile / Middle Mile
  • Legal / Regulatory
  • Optical
  • Quantum
  • Research
  • Security
  • Semiconductors
  • Space
  • Start-ups
  • Subsea
  • Sustainability
  • Video
  • Webinars

Archives

Tags

5G All AT&T Australia AWS Blueprint columns BroadbandWireless Broadcom China Ciena Cisco Data Centers Dell'Oro Ericsson FCC Financial Financials Huawei Infinera Intel Japan Juniper Last Mile Last Mille LTE Mergers and Acquisitions Mobile NFV Nokia Optical Packet Systems PacketVoice People Regulatory Satellite SDN Service Providers Silicon Silicon Valley StandardsWatch Storage TTP UK Verizon Wi-Fi
Converge Digest

A private dossier for networking and telecoms

Follow Us

  • Home
  • About
  • Events Calendar
  • Blueprint Guidelines
  • Privacy Policy
  • Manage Email Delivery
  • NextGenInfra.io

© 2026 Converge Digest - A private dossier for networking and telecoms.

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • About
  • Events Calendar
  • Blueprint Guidelines
  • Privacy Policy
  • Manage Email Delivery
  • NextGenInfra.io

© 2026 Converge Digest - A private dossier for networking and telecoms.

This website uses cookies. By continuing to use this website you are giving consent to cookies being used. Visit our Privacy and Cookie Policy.
Go to mobile version