Europe lacks the infrastructure needed to build up artificial intelligence data centres and is not investing enough to keep business from moving to China and the United States, the head of Nokia said on Thursday. While big technology companies are expected to pour hundreds of billions of dollars into scaling up AI-related infrastructure this year, Europe has been lagging behind due to regulatory and energy constraints. “The issue today is Europe doesn’t have the infrastructure,” Nokia CEO Justin Hotard told Reuters, while praising some of the European Union’s moves, such as the establishment of AI gigafactories.Read More
