Europe’s data centre outlook: data centre truths 2026

Explore the key insights from BCS Consultancy's report on delivery challenges within the European data centre market and the factors shaping its evolution by 2026.

  • Wednesday, 18th February 2026 Posted 2 weeks ago in by Sophie Milburn
BCS Consultancy, a global data centre consultancy, has released its latest report, Data Centre Truths 2026: What it takes to deliver in 2026. Drawing on insights from over 3,000 respondents across 41 countries, the report provides a detailed analysis of the factors currently shaping the European data centre market.

Demand across Europe remains strong, with 93% of participants expecting growth over the next year and 78% reporting increased demand driven by AI in the past 12 months. The main challenge is no longer market expansion, but determining where and how capacity can be delivered. Power availability, skills shortages, planning complexity, supply chain issues, and AI readiness are increasingly affecting projects.

“Europe’s data centre market is not slowing down, but delivery is becoming far more uneven,” said James Hart, CEO of BCS Consultancy. “For the first time, securing power and planning approval is no longer enough. In 2026, those are just entry tickets. Pressure around power, floorspace and rack density continues to shape how quickly AI demand can be converted into deployable capacity.”

Key Findings:

  • Delivery capacity, not demand, is the primary constraint, with 95% of respondents expecting further declines in skilled professionals.
  • Skills shortages are causing commercial impacts, including missed deadlines, rising costs, and lost opportunities.
  • AI-driven demand is increasing, but only 20% of facilities are considered AI-ready, revealing a gap between ambition and deployable capacity.
  • Geopolitical factors are driving interest in renewable energy, with 70% of respondents prioritising sustainability, energy security, and community impact in site selection.
The report provides region-specific insights across the UK, DACH, Italy, the Nordics, Iberia, and France, showing how delivery constraints differ geographically. Local execution capabilities are emerging as critical, with regions facing varied challenges related to power access, skills, and regulatory requirements.

Hart emphasised that “delivery risk is no longer theoretical.” The report includes practical insights from BCS leaders working on live European projects, offering guidance for operators, developers, investors, and policymakers navigating today’s complex data centre landscape.
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