Ohio Governor Mike DeWine, Lt. Governor Jon Husted, the Ohio Department of Development, and JobsOhio announced that Amazon Web Services (AWS) plans to invest an estimated $10 billion in additional funding to expand its data center infrastructure across ...
Amazon Web Services will look beyond Columbus, where energy supply is constrained, to expand its data centers in the state.
Amazon Web Services will invest another $10 billion to bolster its data center infrastructure in Ohio. The company and Republican Gov.
CLEVELAND, Ohio - Amazon Web Services intends to invest an estimated $10 billion to bolster its data center infrastructure in Ohio. Ohio’s goal is to create hundreds of new, well-paying jobs by the end of 2030 and strengthen the state’s role as a major technology hub.
Ticker: Amazon investing another $10 billion in Ohio-based data centers; Retail sales rose at healthy pace last month
Responding to inquiries from this newspaper, an Amazon executive has confirmed Amazon Web Service’s plans for a data center in Fayette County, about an hour’s drive from Montgomery County.
Amazon Web Services announced a $10 billion investment to expand data centers in Ohio, expected to generate jobs by 2030.
Amazon announced Dec. 16 that it’s planning to invest another $10 billion in Ohio to expand its data center infrastructure in the state. In a joint announcement with Gov. Mike DeWine, the administration and the company said Amazon plans to make the investment in and build new data centers across the state by 2030.
Amazon Web Services will invest an estimated $10 billion in additional funding to expand its data center infrastructure across Ohio.
Amazon announced Monday that it will invest $10 billion in Ohio data centers beyond the billions the company has already announced.
Amazon Web Services will invest another $10 billion to bolster its data center infrastructure in Ohio. The company and Republican Gov. Mike DeWine announced the plan Monday. The new investment ...
Amazon ( AMZN, Financial )AWS recently laid out more investment plans that aim to create at least five new data center regions and invest a total of $10 billion in Ohio, increasing the proposed investment in the state to more than $23 billion by 2030.