Amazon chose a telecom trade show to make a data center announcement. That tells you something about where the conversation is.
At MWC Barcelona on March 2, Amazon disclosed plans to invest an additional €18 billion in Spain’s AWS data center infrastructure, adding to the €15.7 billion the company had already committed in 2024. Total planned investment now stands at €33.7 billion through 2035, concentrated in the Aragón region in northeastern Spain.
Amazon estimates the investment will support 29,900 full-time equivalent jobs annually across local businesses and contribute €31.7 billion to Spain’s GDP through the same period. Those are the company’s own projections, not independently modeled figures. Reuters put the new €18 billion tranche at roughly $21 billion at current exchange rates.
David Zapolsky, Amazon’s chief global affairs and legal officer, told reporters the investment makes Spain “the AI epicentre of our operations in Europe.” Aragón’s combination of sparse population, strong renewable energy from solar and wind development, and available land has made it an attractive data center location. This announcement accelerates what was already one of the more active AI infrastructure buildouts in Southern Europe.
MWC is not the typical venue for cloud capex news. The fact that Amazon staged this announcement there, alongside Sánchez meeting Zapolsky at the event, signals that AI infrastructure investment has moved into the same political and economic category as traditional telecommunications. Europe is competing for this capital, and Spain is winning a meaningful piece of it.