
The project gives Germany a home‑grown, high‑performance AI infrastructure, bolstering digital sovereignty and creating a competitive edge for European firms against global cloud giants.
European policymakers have long warned that reliance on overseas AI clouds threatens data privacy and strategic autonomy. Germany’s recent AI strategy emphasizes domestic compute capacity, strict data‑protection standards, and public‑private collaboration. By locating the AI factory on German soil and subjecting it to national security requirements, Deutsche Telekom directly addresses these policy goals, offering a trusted alternative to US‑based providers.
The Munich deployment is technically ambitious: roughly 10,000 Nvidia Blackwell GPUs power DGX B200 super‑nodes and RTX PRO server boards, delivering petaflop‑scale performance. Integrated with SAP’s Germany Stack and Siemens’ SIMCenter simulation tools, the platform creates a seamless pipeline from raw compute to industry‑specific AI models. T‑Systems, Telekom’s infrastructure arm, manages the underlying cloud layer (T Cloud), ensuring enterprise‑grade availability and compliance.
For the market, the AI factory opens a new revenue stream for Telekom while giving German SMEs, research labs, and government agencies affordable, sovereign AI resources. The capacity can accelerate use cases in manufacturing, logistics, and healthcare, fostering home‑grown innovation that competes with Amazon, Microsoft, and Google. As adoption grows, the ecosystem may attract further private investment, reinforcing Europe’s broader ambition to become a self‑sufficient AI hub.
Will form the basis of ‘Germany Stack’ to support country’s sovereign AI efforts
February 09 2026 · Charlotte Trueman
Deutsche Telekom has launched an Nvidia‑powered ‘AI factory’ at a data center operated by Polarise, located in Munich's Tucherpark, in Germany.
Dubbed the ‘Industrial AI Cloud,’ the deployment comprises around 10,000 Nvidia Blackwell GPUs, including Nvidia DGX B200 systems and Nvidia RTX PRO server GPUs.

The AI factory will be operated by Deutsche Telekom on German soil under strict requirements for data protection, security, and availability, the company said. The infrastructure will be made available to companies, research institutions, and the public sector in Germany and across Europe, and already, more than a third of the compute deployed by the telco is being utilized by its current customers.
The infrastructure forms the basis of the so‑called ‘Germany Stack,’ which Telekom provides jointly with SAP, while Telekom subsidiary T‑Systems is responsible for the infrastructure and platform layer, including T Cloud. German multinational Siemens is also integrating parts of its SIMCenter simulation portfolio into the AI Cloud.
“We don’t just talk, Deutsche Telekom takes action,” said Tim Höttges, CEO of Deutsche Telekom. “We are investing in AI, in Germany, and in Europe. Our AI factory in Munich is the foundation for innovative business models, for industry, startups, and the government – and for sovereignty. Here, we are proving that Europe can handle AI.”
Lars Klingbeil, Germany’s Finance Minister, added: “For the investment offensive to succeed, we need both – public and private investment. We have created the conditions for public investment and are now working to ensure that it is invested quickly. An important milestone has been reached here for the German and European AI ecosystem. This will not only benefit innovative companies, but also strengthen digital sovereignty.”
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