German Federal Government issues Data Centre Strategy
March 26, 2026
German Federal Government issues Data Centre StrategyMarch 26, 2026 Why should I read this?With its new Data Centre Strategy of 18 March 2026, the German Federal Government takes a clear political stance: National data centre capacity is to double by 2030, and AI/HPC capacity to quadruple. The strategy addresses three key legal dimensions: (1) site selection, planning and permitting, (2) technology and data sovereignty, and (3) energy and grid access. What do I need to know?1. Urban Planning: Municipal Competence Remains CentralWhile the federal government defines strategic objectives, local authorities retain full planning sovereignty. This means:
For developers, this confirms: Early engagement with municipalities remains the decisive success factor. 2. Real Estate and Site Development ImplicationsThe strategy acknowledges that availability of suitable land is a key bottleneck. It proposes several measures with direct real estate impact:
From a transactional and development perspective, this reinforces the need for robust site due diligence, grid feasibility analysis and early municipal alignment. 3. Technology & Data Sovereignty: Strengthening European CapabilitiesA core pillar of the strategy is the ambition to strengthen European technological independence. Policy measures include:
For operators, this may translate into future compliance requirements relating to technology procurement, cloud models and sovereign by design architecture. 4. Energy & SustainabilityThe strategy identifies three strategic goals relating to energy and sustainability of data centres:
In sum, the Government refers to measures implemented already or steps which it cannot take in its own discretion. What does this mean for stakeholders?The federal strategy sends a strong signal in favour of Germany as a digital infrastructure location. Crucially, urban planning authority remains with the municipalities, which continue to act as the decisive actors in zoning, land use planning and permitting. For investors, operators and developers, the strategy, offers new tailwinds – even if the strategy remains a strategy (only) and needs continued implementation on municipal, regional, grid operator, federal and European level to actually deliver to its political promises. What should I do next?While the ambition is clear, realisation will depend on grid expansion and municipal readiness in particular. Our key recommendations are:
Latest Insights
Latest News
Latest Events
client news June 02, 2026 Next stop, public ownership: Eversheds Sutherland advises DfT on GTR transi... firm news June 01, 2026 Eversheds Sutherland strengthens restructuring offering with senior partner... firm news June 01, 2026 Eversheds Sutherland strengthens Commercial Advisory practice with technolo... client news May 28, 2026 Eversheds Sutherland advises Schroders Greencoat on acquisition of Dutch bi... virtual Spanish employment law training June 02, 2026 2pm - 5pm (BST) Virtual virtual UK employment law training June 09, 2026 1pm - 4pm (BST) Virtual virtual Nordic (Denmark, Finland, Norway and Sweden) employment law training June 16, 2026 12.45pm - 4pm (BST) Virtual virtual Introduction to Swiss employment law June 23, 2026 2pm - 5pm (GMT) Virtual |