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Google to Invest $5B in Belgium to Expand AI and Carbon-Free Infrastructure by 2027

Google to Invest $5B in Belgium to Expand AI and Carbon-Free Infrastructure by 2027

Google to Invest €5 Billion in Belgium to Expand AI and Carbon-Free Infrastructure by 2027


• €5 billion investment through 2027 expands Google’s St. Ghislain data center and creates 300 new jobs.
• 110 MW in new carbon-free energy deals with Eneco, Luminus, and Renner to power 24/7 clean operations.
• Google.org to fund AI upskilling programs as Belgium’s digital economy accelerates toward a projected €50 billion GDP boost.

Expanding Europe’s AI and Cloud Backbone

Google announced a €5 billion ($5.4 billion) investment to expand its AI and data infrastructure in Belgium by 2027, marking one of the largest digital economy commitments in the country’s history. The plan will enlarge the company’s St. Ghislain campus, add 300 full-time positions, and strengthen Belgium’s position as a European hub for AI innovation and sustainable technology.

The announcement came during the Belgian Economic Mission to the United States, attended by HRH Princess Astrid. The expansion will bolster Google Cloud’s Belgium region—part of the company’s 42-region global network that underpins AI-driven services for businesses including Odoo, UZ Leuven, and AZ Delta.

Prime Minister Bart De Wever welcomed the move, calling it “a powerful sign of trust in Belgium as a hub for digital innovation and sustainable growth.” He emphasized that the project aligns with national goals to accelerate the energy transition while deepening digital competitiveness within Europe.

Prime Minister Bart de Wever

Pierre-Yves Jeholet, Vice President of the Walloon Government, said the investment “confirms Wallonia’s role as a European hub for data processing and storage,” citing benefits for local employment, infrastructure, and regional digital sovereignty.

Carbon-Free Energy and Local Resilience

Google’s expansion comes with new long-term clean energy agreements totaling more than 110 MW with Eneco, Luminus, and Renner. The company’s goal is to operate its data centers entirely on 24/7 carbon-free energy (CFE).

The St. Ghislain facility will be directly linked to Belgium’s renewable energy grid, with 365 MW of new clean power resources now supported by Google across the country. Partnering with Centrica Energy and transmission operator Elia, the company will integrate advanced battery storage and demand-response systems to enhance grid reliability and affordability.

Since 2010, Google has signed over 4.5 GW of renewable power agreements across Europe, reflecting its wider ambition to achieve net-zero operations and fully decarbonize its data infrastructure by 2030.

Economic and Employment Impact

The new investment will bring Google’s total commitment in Belgium to over €11 billion since 2007. The St. Ghislain campus currently employs about 600 workers in technical, engineering, and facilities roles, with another 300 positions to be added through 2027.

A recent study by Université de Mons and Deloitte estimates that Google’s existing data centers generated €697 million in GDP from 2022 to 2024 and are projected to contribute more than €1.5 billion annually between 2026 and 2027. The expansion is also expected to support nearly 15,000 jobs per year, including indirect employment through nearly 150 Belgian suppliers, 80 of which are based in Wallonia.

Local officials described the development as an ecosystem catalyst. Florence Monier, Mayor of St. Ghislain, said the project “creates opportunities for other businesses too,” highlighting collaboration with the regional inter-city development agency IDEA.

Florence Monier, Mayor of St. Ghislain

Building Belgium’s AI Workforce

Google.org will fund local non-profits to deliver free AI training programs focused on practical workforce skills and career transitions. The initiative targets workers seeking to adapt to automation and AI-driven transformation across sectors.

According to an Implement Consulting study commissioned by Google, widespread adoption of generative AI could lift Belgium’s GDP by €45–50 billion over the next decade. By integrating cloud infrastructure, AI education, and local innovation partnerships, the company aims to position Belgium at the center of Europe’s next wave of digital growth.

Bikash Koley, Google’s Vice President for Global Infrastructure, said the investment reflects “a deepening of our roots in Belgium and a commitment to ensuring people across Europe have access to opportunity in this era of AI innovation.”

Bikash Koley, Google’s Vice President for Global Infrastructure

RELATED ARTICLE: Google Signs Largest Corporate Fusion Energy Deal

Sustainability Beyond Energy

Alongside its carbon-free commitments, Google has introduced a regional water stewardship program. The company is supporting Shayp’s IoT leak detection system across 240 non-residential buildings near St. Ghislain, designed to save approximately 500 cubic meters of water annually by 2030. The initiative contributes to Google’s broader goal to replenish 120% of the water it consumes globally by the same year.

The company’s local sustainability measures aim to reduce operational impact while enhancing community infrastructure, aligning with European Green Deal objectives and Belgium’s national energy and digitalization strategies.

Global Context and Strategic Importance

For Europe, Google’s investment consolidates the continent’s role in the emerging global AI infrastructure race, as governments and corporations compete to secure clean, sovereign, and scalable data capacity. Belgium’s balance of renewable energy access, regulatory stability, and skilled talent base makes it an attractive anchor point for such initiatives.

The Belgian government has framed the investment not just as a technological boost, but as a governance model—linking AI development with climate responsibility and regional inclusivity. As global demand for AI-driven computing intensifies, the St. Ghislain expansion positions Belgium as both a strategic node in Google’s global network and a test case for how digital infrastructure can advance Europe’s broader green and economic transformation.

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