Lombardy sets data centre rules as Italy eyes €22 billion boom - Finance news and analysis from Global Banking & Finance Review
Finance

Lombardy sets data centre rules as Italy eyes €22 billion boom

Published by Global Banking & Finance Review

Posted on June 10, 2026

3 min read

· Last updated: June 10, 2026

Add as preferred source on Google

Lombardy Approves Data Centre Law as Italy Eyes €22bn Digital Boom

By Giancarlo Navach

Italy's Data Centre Expansion and Regional Strategies

MILAN, June 10 (Reuters) - The Lombardy region, with Milan at its heart, has approved a law intended as a framework to regulate and manage demand for data centres, a sector expected to boom over the next five years with investments estimated at around €22 billion ($25 billion) in Italy, regional councilor Massimo Sertori told Reuters. 

At the same time, the southern region of Puglia is positioning itself as one of the main digital hubs in southern Italy and the Mediterranean area.

Lombardy's Role in Italy's Digital Transformation

"Italy is set to see the construction of approximately 3 gigawatts of new data centre capacity; of these, 1.5 to 2 gigawatts will be built in Lombardy over the next five years," Sertori said, adding that €10 to €12 billion were likely to go to Lombardy out of the total €22 billion investment.

Policy Incentives and Site Selection

The regional authorities in Lombardy plan to make it cheaper for developers to use brownfield sites, rather than building on farmland or parks.

Milan: The Nation's Data Centre Hub

According to a study by researchers at the Data Center Observatory of Milan's Politecnico University, the Milan area remains Italy's main data centre hub, accounting for 68% of the country's total installed nominal power capacity in the sector.

The city also accounts for 23% of all investments announced in the sector at the European level, the study said.

Managing Growth and Environmental Impact

"Rather than simply enduring it, it is better to manage this process, which will continue regardless and is inevitable. For this reason, we aim to simplify procedures," Sertori said.

"We are pushing for these investments to be made on brownfield sites — abandoned industrial areas — and strongly encouraging that they not be built on agricultural land or undeveloped sites," he added.

"If the request involves agricultural land, construction charges will be 100% higher, and 200% higher in parks or sensitive areas."

Puglia's Ambitions in the Digital Infrastructure Race

Investment Surge and International Interest

Over the 2026-2028 period, 30 companies — including 19 new operators — have announced 83 new infrastructure projects in Italy with a total potential value of €25.4 billion, the Politecnico study said.

However, 72% of these investments come from new international operators not yet active in Italy, and timelines could be extended by the lack of a standardized approval process.

Infrastructure Costs and Regional Opportunities

Costs are also a challenge. Building the infrastructure alone for a 100 MW data centre — excluding servers — costs around €1 billion on average, equivalent to roughly €10 million per MW, an industry source said.

Italy hosts around 205 data centres, mainly concentrated around Rome and Milan, but Puglia is also seeking to benefit from the trend, particularly around Bari, the regional capital, thanks to submarine fibre-optic cables landing there.

Bari: A New Digital Gateway

Among the projects are plans to convert the area of a former tobacco factory in Bari into a 200 MW data centre, with work due to start at the end of the year.

"There are several project proposals in the Bari area because this is where connectivity from the Middle East and other regions arrives through the Adriatic," Eugenio Di Sciascio, Puglia's regional councilor for economic development, told Reuters. 

"This facilitates the presence of these facilities. We are receiving double-digit numbers of requests to build data centres," he added.

($1 = 0.8657 euros)

(Editing by Keith Weir)

Key Takeaways

  • Regional Law No. 11/2026, effective June 5 2026, creates a ‘Regional Data Centre Desk’ to centralise permitting and promote sustainable brownfield development in Lombardy (studioinzaghi.com).
  • Projects on agricultural land face 100 % higher charges, and those in parks or sensitive areas face 200 % higher charges, incentivising reuse of industrial sites (tomshardware.com).
  • Milan accounts for 68 % of Italy’s data‑centre installed capacity (about 414 MW), confirming its role as the country’s digital hub (polimi.it).

References

Frequently Asked Questions

What new law has Lombardy approved regarding data centres?
Lombardy has approved a law to regulate and manage demand for data centres, focusing on encouraging development on brownfield sites and simplifying approval procedures.
How much investment is expected in Italy's data centre sector?
Around €22 billion in investment is expected in Italy's data centre sector over the next five years.
Why is Milan important for Italy's data centre industry?
Milan remains the main hub, representing 68% of Italy’s total installed capacity and 23% of all announced European sector investments.
What incentives exist for data centre developers in Lombardy?
Developers are incentivized to use abandoned industrial (brownfield) sites with lower charges, while building on farmland or parks faces doubled or tripled costs.
How is the Puglia region positioning itself in the data centre industry?
Puglia, especially around Bari, is leveraging submarine fibre-optic connectivity and repurposing sites like a former tobacco factory to attract data centre projects.

Tags

Related Articles

More from Finance

Explore more articles in the Finance category