Macquarie Telecom’s new data centre seeks to challenge the dominance of Canberra Data Centres for the lucrative $2 billion federal government cloud market.
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In-depth Analysis and Data-driven Insights on the Impact of COVID-19 Included in this Global Data Center Construction Market Report
The data center construction market is expected to grow at a CAGR of 4.8% during the period 2021-2026.
The global data center construction market continues to witness a slew of mergers and acquisitions, followed by joint ventures. The growing demand for data center services across industries has led service providers to collaborate, participate, and sign several mergers and acquisitions to expand their portfolios, expand their reach, and increase their penetration in the market. M&A activities have been followed up with joint ventures, which have acted as a catalyst for market growth.
ResearchAndMarkets.com s offering.
In-depth Analysis and Data-driven Insights on the Impact of COVID-19 Included in this Global Data Center Construction Market Report
The data center construction market is expected to grow at a CAGR of 4.8% during the period 2021-2026.
The global data center construction market continues to witness a slew of mergers and acquisitions, followed by joint ventures. The growing demand for data center services across industries has led service providers to collaborate, participate, and sign several mergers and acquisitions to expand their portfolios, expand their reach, and increase their penetration in the market. M & A activities have been followed up with joint ventures, which have acted as a catalyst for market growth. Although the market witnessed several mergers and acquisitions in 2020, the most remarkable ones are the acquisition of Digital Realty merger with Interxion in March 2020, Hypertec by Vantage Data Center in Nov 2020 in Canada. The
Exclusive: Millions of Australia s tax and company files are being held by a Chinese-owned centre, with the Government agencies struggling to find a new home for its servers. As detailed yesterday, the Defence Department was told in 2016 by then treasurer Scott Morrison it had to look for alternatives after Global Switch (GSU) data centre was sold off to a Chinese data firm. There were fears Australia s sovereignty and secrets were at risk by the sell off, from a United Kingdom consortium to one in China, whose State hackers had already been targeting Australia s servers. But Defence only managed to remove some of its classified documents and was forced to re-sign two new multimillion-dollar contracts with the Chinese company for another five years from 2021, as it struggled to move all its assets out.