OpenAI has announced Stargate Norway, its first AI data center initiative in Europe, marking a major step in the company’s plan to place world-class compute closer to the communities that use it. The project debuts under the OpenAI for Countries program, which aims to pair national priorities with frontier-grade AI infrastructure. The announcement was posted on July 31, 2025.
The site will rise in Narvik, Norway, chosen for its abundant hydropower, cool climate, and established industrial base—factors that make it a compelling home for sustainable, at-scale AI. OpenAI frames Stargate Norway as “one of the most ambitious AI infrastructure investments in Europe to date,” designed to boost productivity and growth for developers, researchers, startups, and public bodies across the region.
Two heavyweight partners anchor the build: Nscale, an AI infrastructure provider with deployments across Europe and North America, and Aker, whose century-long industrial track record in energy makes it a natural fit. Nscale will design and build the facility, and ownership is expected to be a 50/50 joint venture between Nscale and Aker. OpenAI is positioned as an initial offtaker, with the option to scale usage over time through OpenAI for Countries.
On capacity, the numbers are striking: 230 MW at launch, with ambitions to add another 290 MW as demand grows. The plan targets 100,000 NVIDIA GPUs by the end of 2026, with room to expand significantly thereafter. For a continent grappling with surging AI workloads, that’s meaningful headroom—and a signal that sovereign compute is moving from rhetoric to reality.
Sustainability is built in, not bolted on. The facility will run entirely on renewable power and incorporate closed-loop, direct-to-chip liquid cooling for high thermal efficiency. Even better, waste heat from the GPU systems will be made available to local low-carbon enterprises, turning a by-product into regional value. This approach pairs performance with environmental responsibility in a way that European stakeholders have been demanding.
Crucially, OpenAI stresses that priority access will flow to Norway’s AI ecosystem—supporting homegrown startups and scientific teams—while surplus capacity will be available to public and private users across the UK, Nordics, and Northern Europe. That regional framing aims to accelerate Europe’s AI development while strengthening resilience and choice for organizations seeking high-end compute.
Stargate Norway follows Stargate UAE earlier this year and sits alongside OpenAI’s growing collaborations with European governments, including a recent MOU with the UK Government, partnerships in Estonia’s schools, and expressions of interest for the EU’s AI Gigafactories initiative. It’s part of a larger strategy to meet demand locally and support sovereign AI goals with credible infrastructure.
As an AI enthusiast, I see Stargate Norway as more than a data center—it’s an ecosystem commitment. By blending renewable energy, advanced cooling, heat-reuse, and regional access policies, OpenAI is sketching a blueprint for how frontier compute can serve communities, not just workloads. If Europe wants AI’s benefits widely shared, this is the kind of build that makes it possible.
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