
While Meta’s Indiana campus anchors hyperscale expansion in the United States, Europe recorded its own major infrastructure milestone this week as Amsterdam-based AI infrastructure provider Nebius unveiled plans for a 240-megawatt data center campus in Béthune, France, near Lille in the country’s northern industrial corridor.
When completed, the campus will rank among Europe’s largest AI-focused data center facilities and positions northern France as a growing node in the continent’s expanding AI infrastructure map.
The development repurposes a former Bridgestone tire manufacturing site, reflecting a broader trend across Europe in which legacy industrial properties, already equipped with heavy power access, transport links, and industrial zoning, are being converted into large-scale digital infrastructure hubs.
Located within reach of connectivity and enterprise corridors linking Paris, Brussels, London, and Amsterdam, the site allows Nebius to serve major European markets while avoiding the congestion and power constraints increasingly shaping Tier 1 data center hubs.
Industrial Infrastructure Becomes Digital Infrastructure
Developers increasingly view former industrial sites as ideal for AI campuses because they often provide:
• Existing grid interconnection capacity built for heavy industry
• Transport and logistics infrastructure already in place
• Industrial zoning that reduces permitting friction
• Large contiguous parcels suited to phased campus expansion
For regions like Hauts-de-France, redevelopment projects also offer economic transition opportunities, replacing legacy manufacturing capacity with next-generation digital infrastructure investment.
Local officials have positioned the project as part of broader efforts to reposition northern France as a logistics and technology hub within Europe.
The Neocloud Model Gains Ground
Beyond the site itself, Nebius’ expansion illustrates the rapid emergence of neocloud infrastructure providers, companies building GPU-intensive AI capacity without operating full hyperscale cloud ecosystems.
These firms increasingly occupy a strategic middle ground: supplying AI compute capacity to enterprises, startups, and even hyperscalers facing short-term infrastructure constraints.
Nebius’ rise over the past year illustrates how rapidly demand is shifting.
In November 2025, the company disclosed it had signed a $3 billion, five-year infrastructure agreement with Meta, even as executives noted the deal had to be limited by available capacity because the company was effectively sold out of deployable infrastructure.
Two months earlier, Nebius also signed a $19.4 billion infrastructure deal with Microsoft, reportedly tied to providing access to more than 100,000 Nvidia GB300 GPUs; one of the largest GPU infrastructure supply agreements announced to date.
All in all, the agreements underscore how hyperscalers themselves increasingly rely on specialized infrastructure providers to supplement internal capacity as AI demand accelerates.
Capacity Constraints Drive Expansion
Nebius executives have openly acknowledged that capacity availability, not customer demand, has been the primary constraint on revenue growth.
The company’s Q3 2025 financial results showed revenue surging more than 350% year over year, while capital expenditures climbed to nearly $1 billion for the quarter, reflecting rapid investment in new infrastructure and hardware.
CEO Arkady Volozh told shareholders that the company is aggressively working to remove deployment bottlenecks and expects rapid scaling through 2026.
The company now aims to secure approximately 2.5 gigawatts of contracted power capacity by the end of 2026, up sharply from earlier projections of one gigawatt. Of that amount, Nebius expects between 800 MW and 1 GW of power to be connected to operational data centers by that time.
Such numbers place Nebius among the fastest-scaling independent AI infrastructure providers globally.
To support expansion beyond 2026, the company plans to combine corporate debt, asset-backed financing, and equity issuance, underscoring the capital intensity required to compete in the AI infrastructure market.
A Rapidly Expanding Global Footprint
Nebius’ expansion extends well beyond France.
The Amsterdam-based company emerged after Yandex spun off its European infrastructure assets, including its Finnish data center operations, into an independent entity. Today, Nebius operates or develops infrastructure across Finland, Iceland, France, the UK, Israel, and the United States.
Recent deployments include:
• Launch of a 4,000-GPU Nvidia cluster at Ark Data Centres’ Longcross Park campus in Surrey
• Development of a 300 MW campus in New Jersey with DataOne, with initial capacity coming online in 2025
• Planned leasing activity at a new facility in Kansas City
• Operation of infrastructure within Equinix facilities in Paris
• Construction of a national AI supercomputer project in Israel supported by government funding
The Béthune campus now becomes one of the largest planned additions to that footprint.
Phased Deployment Reflects Demand Urgency
Construction at Béthune will proceed in phases, with initial capacity expected online by late summer 2026, and roughly half of total planned capacity operational by year-end.
Industry analysts note phased deployment strategies reflect the urgency of AI demand: operators increasingly bring partial capacity online quickly rather than waiting for full campus completion.
Investment figures for the project have not been publicly disclosed, but industry benchmarks suggest AI-focused facilities at this scale typically require multi-billion-euro capital commitments, given the cost of power delivery, cooling systems, and GPU infrastructure.
Why Béthune Matters for Europe’s AI Strategy
Beyond scale alone, the project supports Europe’s growing emphasis on domestic AI infrastructure capacity, reducing reliance on overseas compute resources for enterprises and public-sector workloads subject to data residency requirements.
Projects like Nebius’ expansion support:
• Growth of regional AI infrastructure capacity
• Enterprise AI adoption within European jurisdictions
• Industrial redevelopment aligned with digital infrastructure investment
• Competitive alternatives to hyperscaler-dominated cloud ecosystems
It’s hard not to see how Nebius’ expansion signals that AI infrastructure competition, once defined almost entirely by hyperscale cloud providers, is becoming broader, more regionalized, and increasingly multinational.





















