Microsoft has acquired a Norwegian data center agreement that OpenAI recently abandoned. The transaction brings over 30,000 Nvidia Rubin GPUs into Microsoft’s portfolio at the Narvik location, coinciding with OpenAI’s strategic pullback from large-scale infrastructure investments.
The infrastructure project, dubbed “Stargate Norway,” is under development by Nscale, a UK-based AI cloud provider. Initially designed as a 230-megawatt complex, the facility had OpenAI positioned as the primary tenant for approximately half the available capacity. When negotiations collapsed, Microsoft capitalized on the opportunity.
The revised agreement enhances Microsoft’s current partnership with Nscale at the Narvik location. The contract spans five years commencing in 2026, with all computing operations fueled exclusively by renewable energy. The complete installation aims to house up to 100,000 Nvidia GPUs at full buildout.
“Expanding our work with Nscale in Narvik helps ensure Microsoft customers have access to the advanced AI infrastructure they need as demand continues to grow across Europe,” said Jon Tinter, president of business development and ventures at Microsoft.
OpenAI acknowledged it is currently negotiating with Microsoft to lease computing resources from the Narvik data center instead of securing direct access. An OpenAI representative indicated this strategy “makes more financial sense,” fitting within OpenAI’s existing $250 billion commitment to Microsoft’s Azure cloud infrastructure.
This withdrawal represents part of a larger trend for OpenAI. Just last week, the organization announced it had suspended another Stargate initiative in the United Kingdom, pointing to elevated energy expenses and challenging regulatory conditions. Microsoft similarly assumed control of a Stargate-associated development in Texas that had previously involved both OpenAI and Oracle.
OpenAI’s infrastructure blueprint shows signs of transformation. The company informed investors in February that it currently anticipates spending approximately $600 billion on computing resources through 2030 — a substantial reduction from prior estimates of $1.4 trillion across eight years. Industry sources suggest the company is transitioning toward capacity leasing rather than proprietary data center development.
Microsoft stock advanced 4.19% following the announcement, demonstrating favorable investor reaction to the news.
As OpenAI retreats, Microsoft continues expanding. In March, Nscale revealed it would facilitate Microsoft’s deployment of Nvidia’s Vera Rubin platform throughout the UK, Norway, and additional territories. The Narvik expansion strengthens that collaboration.
Microsoft is simultaneously planning to purchase approximately 3,200 acres in Cheyenne, Wyoming, for supplementary U.S. data center operations. The Narvik transaction complements its pre-existing $6.2 billion investment at the Norwegian site.
According to the most recent analyst data, 38 Wall Street analysts assign Microsoft a “Strong Buy” rating, with a consensus 12-month price target of $573, suggesting approximately 40% upside potential from present trading levels.
The post Microsoft (MSFT) Stock Surges 4% After Securing Norway Data Center Deal from OpenAI appeared first on Blockonomi.