TradingKey - On Monday, e-commerce giant Amazon (AMZN) announced a $20 billion investment in Pennsylvania, USA, to build two data center campuses. One of the sites will be located adjacent to the Susquehanna nuclear power plant, while the other will be situated in the Fairless Hills logistics park. The project is expected to create at least 1,250 high-skilled jobs.
Pennsylvania Governor Josh Shapiro described this as "the largest private investment in the state's history," emphasizing that the project will not only bring tax revenue growth to local communities but also promote the development of the artificial intelligence industry in Pennsylvania. Additionally, Kevin Miller, Vice President of Global Data Centers for Amazon Web Services (AWS), revealed that the company plans to construct another data center campus north of Philadelphia.
The market reacted positively to this news; by the close of trading on Monday, Amazon's stock price had risen by 1.60%.
(Source: TradingView)
Since the beginning of 2024, Amazon has continued to expand its strategic layout for computing infrastructure, having invested approximately $10 billion each in Mississippi, Indiana, Ohio, and North Carolina to build data centers.
However, it is noteworthy that Amazon plans to directly connect one of its data centers to a nuclear power plant's energy supply. Previously, it acquired a data center adjacent to the power plant from Talen Energy for $650 million and signed an exclusive power supply agreement—this move has attracted close attention from federal regulators.
Andy Cvengros, a senior data center industry expert at JLL, predicts that by 2029, 75% to 85% of new data center capacity will be pre-leased in advance. The driving force behind this trend comes from investment-grade hyperscale companies like Microsoft, Google, Meta, and Amazon—these tech giants plan to invest over $300 billion in the data center sector this year alone.