Why should I read this?
With its new Data Centre Strategy of 18 March 2026, the German Federal Government takes a clear political stance: National data centre capacity is to double by 2030, and AI/HPC capacity to quadruple. The strategy addresses three key legal dimensions: (1) site selection, planning and permitting, (2) technology and data sovereignty, and (3) energy and grid access.
What do I need to know?
1. Urban Planning: Municipal Competence Remains Central
While the federal government defines strategic objectives, local authorities retain full planning sovereignty. This means:
- Municipalities continue to be the ones setting up land use plans (Flächennutzungspläne) and binding development plans (Bebauungspläne).
- Proposed “priority areas” and criteria catalogues in the federal strategy do not override municipal competence; they are mere guidance.
- The implementation of faster planning and permitting procedures will depend heavily on local administrative practice, including the outcome of the federal “practice check” on planning and permitting procedures.
For developers, this confirms: Early engagement with municipalities remains the decisive success factor.
2. Real Estate and Site Development Implications
The strategy acknowledges that availability of suitable land is a key bottleneck. It proposes several measures with direct real estate impact:
- Brownfield-first approach: Pre-used industrial or infrastructure sites may be prioritised, creating new opportunities for landowners and developers.
- Enhancing municipal incentives: A potential special trade tax allocation key for data centres is under review, which could materially improve local acceptance.
- Infrastructure prerequisites: Sites must offer, or allow rapid provision of, high-performance grid connections, fibre infrastructure and mobile connectivity.
From a transactional and development perspective, this reinforces the need for robust site due diligence, grid feasibility analysis and early municipal alignment.
3. Technology & Data Sovereignty: Strengthening European Capabilities
A core pillar of the strategy is the ambition to strengthen European technological independence. Policy measures include:
- Promoting European cloud and AI infrastructure, including the forthcoming EU Cloud & AI Development Act.
- Supporting sovereign compute capacity for AI training and inference.
- Fostering the integration of European hardware and software components across the entire data centre technology stack.
- Driving standards for cyber resilience and security, especially given the classification of large-scale data centres as critical infrastructure.
For operators, this may translate into future compliance requirements relating to technology procurement, cloud models and sovereign by design architecture.
4. Energy & Sustainability
The strategy identifies three strategic goals relating to energy and sustainability of data centres:
- Secured and accelerated grid connection: As grid connection capacity is scarce, especially in major hubs such as the Frankfurt and Berlin areas, the Federal Government announces proposals for changes to the grid connection procedures for both transmission system and distribution system operators. A leaked legislative proposal by the Federal Ministry for Economic Affairs and Energy, referred to as "grid package", indicates that the four German power transmission system operators will have to adopt a uniform procedure for awarding connections and may prioritize connections for specific purposes, and that distribution system operators will be entitled to introduce analogous procedures and standards The strategy simply announces proposals by the Government. In addition, the Federal Government wants to support the creation of sample contracts for so-called "flexible connection agreements (FCA)", which shall help data centres projects to be developed in parallel to increasing grid connection capacities made available at the relevant sites over time.
- Use of green power and waste heat: 50% of the power used in a data centre must be sourced from renewable energy sources from 2024, and 100% from 2027, under applicable law already. The strategy mentions self-generation of power on site to complement procurement of green power and attempts in “business” to generate such power with fossil fuels. It also announces a (non-specified) “dialogue process” and promises a proposal for amending the Energy Efficiency Act in 2026 and to engage with the European Commission to allow gratuitous supplies of waste heat without tax-related risks.
- Competitive power prices: Finally, the strategy acknowledges that power prices in Germany are a challenge for data centre operators. In this context, the Government reminds that it already has taken over financial support for renewable energy generation. It also considers including data centre operators in the "power price compensation" aid scheme. This, however, is contingent on state aid approval by the European Commission. The same would apply to an extension of the "industry power price" to data centres. Last, the Government asks the Federal Network Agency to take into account data centres in its ongoing reform of network access fees.
In sum, the Government refers to measures implemented already or steps which it cannot take in its own discretion.
What does this mean for stakeholders?
The federal strategy sends a strong signal in favour of Germany as a digital infrastructure location.
Crucially, urban planning authority remains with the municipalities, which continue to act as the decisive actors in zoning, land use planning and permitting. For investors, operators and developers, the strategy, offers new tailwinds – even if the strategy remains a strategy (only) and needs continued implementation on municipal, regional, grid operator, federal and European level to actually deliver to its political promises.
What should I do next?
While the ambition is clear, realisation will depend on grid expansion and municipal readiness in particular. Our key recommendations are:
- Prioritise willing municipalities and engage early with a clear local benefit story (heat reuse, taxes, jobs).
- Secure grid feasibility immediately through early DSO/TSO discussions and explore flexible connection models.
- Maintain multi region optionality and align designs with federal and state level guidance to strengthen planning credibility.