Digital Sovereignty Meets Nuclear Fusion: Tomorrow’s IT Infrastructure

The boom in cloud services and artificial intelligence is exacerbating energy shortages worldwide. At CloudFest, a high-profile panel discusses how innovative data centers and nuclear fusion can pave the way out of the crisis.

Panel discussion from CloudFest 2026

The IT infrastructure market faces an unprecedented challenge. On one hand, the rapid proliferation of resource-intensive applications such as artificial intelligence is massively driving up global electricity demand. On the other hand, the physical provision of energy is reaching regulatory and infrastructural limits. As part of a panel discussion at CloudFest, Nicolaj Kamensek, founder and COO of Frankfurt-based data center operator firstcolo, and Professor Dr. Florian Wasser, Senior Scientist at deep-tech company Focused Energy, discussed the pressing questions at the intersection of digital sovereignty, resilient IT infrastructure, and forward-looking energy generation.

Power Shortage as Growth Constraint in the Core Market of Frankfurt

The shortage of power capacity in the local grid is particularly noticeable at Frankfurt am Main, Europe’s leading digital hub. Technological development is progressing significantly faster than the expansion of traditional grid infrastructure by regional utilities. Anyone requesting new, significant energy capacity for a data center in Frankfurt today must expect waiting times of five to ten years.

This shortage is leading to a noticeable geographic shift in the market. The radius for new data center projects around the Main metropolis is becoming increasingly larger. Since physical distance plays a subordinate role with modern fiber optic connectivity and high network connectivity, companies primarily select the location for new infrastructure based on the immediate availability of power.

The Role of Data and Energy Sovereignty in Germany

Control over one’s own workloads is essential for genuine digital sovereignty. The storage and processing of sensitive data must take place within Germany or the European Union to avoid legal gray areas such as those created by the US CLOUD Act. However, this digital independence absolutely requires a secure, affordable, and domestically available energy base.

Thanks to its deeply rooted expertise in engineering, Germany has excellent prerequisites for assuming a global leadership role in the development of sustainable and resilient infrastructure. In view of the structural transformation in traditional key industries such as the automotive sector, the establishment of sovereign IT and energy infrastructure offers the opportunity to set new technological standards.

Nicolaj Kamensek, founder and COO of Frankfurt-based data center operator firstcolo
Nicolaj Kamensek, founder and COO of Frankfurt-based data center operator firstcolo

Nuclear Fusion as a Fundamental Turning Point for the Energy Industry

Nuclear fusion is considered a long-term and potentially inexhaustible solution to resource scarcity. While the technology was often regarded as a theoretical future project in the past, the situation has fundamentally changed. Through the scientific breakthrough of controlled ignition in the United States of America, where more energy was generated than consumed for the first time, nuclear fusion has transformed from a purely physical question into a solvable engineering task.

Companies such as Focused Energy are aiming for the commissioning of the first fusion power plants within the next ten to fifteen years. Commercial use of the technology on an industrial scale is thus moving within tangible reach for the 2040s. Noteworthy here is the technological interaction: the enormous progress in optimizing fusion parameters was only made possible through the use of modern machine learning algorithms and data analysis. The digital industry is thus providing the tools to secure its own future energy supply.

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