Oracle expands cloud region in Nordics by adding new data centers

Oracle said it opened its cloud region in the Nordics in Stockholm, along with one in Milan, Italy, as the Covid-19 pandemic increased demand for cloud computing solutions from CIOs.
Oracle Cloud for CIOsCloud regions refer to the geographical location of data centers, allowing customers near that region to get faster access to their data.

Currently available Oracle Cloud regions:

Asia Pacific: Tokyo (Japan), Osaka (Japan), Seoul (South Korea), Chuncheon (South Korea), Mumbai (India), Hyderabad (India), Sydney (Australia), Melbourne (Australia)

Americas: San Jose (United States), Phoenix (United States), Ashburn (United States), Toronto (Canada), Montreal (Canada), São Paolo (Brazil), Vinhedo (Brazil), Santiago (Chile)

Europe: Frankfurt (Germany), London (United Kingdom), Newport, Wales (United Kingdom), Zürich (Switzerland), Amsterdam (The Netherlands)

Middle East: Jeddah (Saudi Arabia), Dubai (U.A.E)

Government: Two general U.S. Government regions, and U.S. National Security regions, three U.S. Department of Defense specific Government regions, two in the United Kingdom (London and Newport, Wales)

Cloud computing companies such as Oracle, Microsoft, Amazon and Google have been setting up new data centers across Europe to cater to clients shifting from in-house digital storage and computing to leased cloud servers.

Oracle already has cloud regions in Germany, the Netherlands, France, the UK and Switzerland in Europe. Including the two new regions, it will have facilities in 36 regions worldwide, with plans to add eight more by the end of next year.

The company has already signed contracts with potential customers in Europe and is planning to open a second region in France and one in Spain.

“European organizations want to store their data in Europe or in their local country where possible,” said Carla Arend, senior program director at research firm IDC.

Oracle lags its bigger rivals in the race for cornering the cloud computing market, but its total cloud revenue still rose 22 percent to $2.7 billion in the latest second quarter.

Earlier this year, Oracle said it will migrate the most complicated computer programs of companies to its cloud for free, in a bid to catch a new wave of potential cloud-computing clients.

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