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Monday, December 28th, 2015

    Time Event
    8:06p
    Foxconn Entering European Data Center Services Market

    The Czech branch of Foxconn, the Taiwanese electronics manufacturer best known as a supplier of popular devices such as Apple’s iPhone, Microsoft’s Xbox, and Amazon’s Kindle, is entering the European data center services market.

    The company has had manufacturing facilities in the Czech Republic since 2000, but recently it partnered with Czech investment management group KKCG on a joint venture to build a data center in Prague that will support a range of data center services for enterprises as well as small and mid-size businesses. Each partner will own a 50-percent stake in the joint venture, called SafeDX.

    Alan Macintyre, CEO of Foxconn Technology CZ, said the venture was part of a new investment strategy for Foxconn, which included building data centers and providing data center services. “The first data center in Prague is a pilot project, which we want to follow by an expansion throughout Europe,” he said in a statement.

    The Taiwanese company is no stranger to the data center business and has recently made several big strategic deals to expand in the space. In addition to its own data centers in China and Taiwan it builds data centers for 21Vianet, one of China’s largest data center service providers, with whom it also has a joint venture called Smart Time Technologies.

    Launched in 2014, Smart Time aims to build a vertically integrated business that builds IT equipment and data centers to house it and provide IT services, starting in China but with plans to expand to Singapore, Hong Kong, and other markets.

    Earlier this year Foxconn partnered with the Japanese IT company NEC Corp. to build an Infrastructure-as-a-Service platform in one Foxconn’s data center in Kaohsiung, Taiwan. Also this year the company announced a major expansion push into India, planning to build up to 12 facilities, including factories and data centers, Reuters reported.

    Foxconn is also building data centers for Apple in China, according to a report by Nikkei Asian Review.

    The Taiwanese manufacturing giant entered into a partnership with HP last year to supply commodity x86 servers for hyperscale customers.

    It has also manufactured HP’s modular data centers called EcoPod. At least one of the sites where EcoPods have been produced is in Foxconn’s factory in Kutna Hora, a city about 50 miles east of Prague.

    Last year Foxconn patented two data center container designs and a system for powering data center container with photovoltaic panels.

    10:33p
    Data Center Provider Steel Orca Files for Bankruptcy

    Steel Orca, a Newtown, Pennsylvania-based data center service provider, has filed for bankruptcy, following a failed attempt to convert a defunct steel mill on the New Jersey-Pennsylvania border into a data center.

    The company, which according to its website also operates a data center in Princeton, New Jersey, filed a voluntary petition for Chapter 7 bankruptcy earlier this month, according to public bankruptcy court documents available online. Under Chapter 7 bankruptcy, a debtor’s assets are handed over to a trustee for distribution among creditors.

    Bunce Atkinson, a bankruptcy attorney with Red Bank, New Jersey-based Atkinson & DeBartolo, was appointed as the trustee in Steel Orca’s case. Atkinson or Steel Orca representatives could not be reached for comment Monday.

    Steel Orca had grand plans for its data center project in Bucks County. The data center would be 300,000 square feet in size, use multiple local renewable energy sources, and be cooled by water from the Delaware River to reduce energy use of the cooling system.

    The project stalled, but the company did not explain why. Another data center is going up at the steel mill site, being built by a company called Keystone Nap that has some links to Steel Orca. Keystone president John Parker was involved with Steel Orca as an attorney.

    Keystone CEO Peter Ritz told Philadelphia Business Journal that the Steel Orca project “fell through,” which allowed for formation of Keystone. He did not say why the first data center project at the site failed.

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