Microsoft picked up a data center deal in Narvik, Norway, that OpenAI walked away from. The move added more than 30,000 Nvidia Rubin GPUs to Microsoft’s existing footprint at the site, and comes as OpenAI quietly scales back its infrastructure ambitions.
Microsoft Corporation, MSFT
The facility, known as “Stargate Norway,” is being built by UK-based AI cloud startup Nscale. It was originally planned as a 230-megawatt campus, with OpenAI in discussions to rent around half of the capacity as an “initial offtaker.” Those talks broke down, and Microsoft stepped in.
The new agreement expands Microsoft’s existing deal with Nscale at the Narvik campus. It runs for five years starting in 2026, and the compute will be powered entirely by renewable energy. The full site is targeting up to 100,000 Nvidia GPUs in total capacity.
OpenAI confirmed it is now in discussions with Microsoft to rent compute capacity from the Narvik facility, rather than taking it directly. A spokesperson said this approach “makes more financial sense,” falling under OpenAI’s existing $250 billion contracted spend on Microsoft’s Azure cloud platform.
This is not an isolated incident for OpenAI. Last week, the company confirmed it had halted a separate Stargate project in the UK, citing energy costs and the country’s regulatory environment. Microsoft also previously stepped in on a Stargate-linked project in Texas that had involved OpenAI and Oracle.
OpenAI’s infrastructure strategy appears to be shifting. The company told investors in February it now expects to spend around $600 billion on compute through 2030 — a notable step down from earlier projections of $1.4 trillion over eight years. Reports indicate it is moving toward leasing capacity rather than building its own data centers.
Microsoft stock rose 4.19% on the day of the announcement, reflecting positive market sentiment around the news.
While OpenAI pulls back, Microsoft is adding capacity. In March, Nscale announced it would support Microsoft’s rollout of Nvidia’s Vera Rubin platform across UK, Norway, and other locations. The Narvik expansion builds on that relationship.
Microsoft is also planning to acquire roughly 3,200 acres in Cheyenne, Wyoming, for additional U.S. data center capacity. The Narvik deal adds to its existing $6.2 billion commitment at the site.
As of the latest available data, 38 Wall Street analysts rate Microsoft a “Strong Buy,” with a consensus 12-month price target of $573, implying roughly 40% upside from current levels.
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