Digital Infrastructure | More than just fast internet: How 5G, edge computing and AI are changing the economy forever
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Published on: March 4, 2026 / Updated on: March 4, 2026 – Author: Konrad Wolfenstein

Digital infrastructure | More than just fast internet: How 5G, edge computing and AI are changing the economy forever – Image: Xpert.Digital
The invisible lifeline: Why digital infrastructure determines the future of entire economies
Battle of the superpowers: Is Europe losing ground in the most important location factor of the future?
In an era where artificial intelligence and real-time data processing are rapidly reshaping the global economy, digital infrastructure is becoming the ultimate question of destiny for companies and entire nations. Those who hesitate in expanding fiber optic networks, 5G, and state-of-the-art data centers not only risk losing their economic competitiveness but also the irrevocable loss of their digital sovereignty. While the US is pumping hundreds of billions into new AI infrastructures as part of gigantic initiatives, Europe stands at a critical turning point: If it fails to satisfy the enormous energy and computing demands of these new technologies with intelligent, nationwide networks, the continent risks being definitively left behind in the global technology race. The following text examines why the invisible foundation of data cables and high-performance servers has long been the most important location factor of our time – and how the telecommunications industry must fundamentally transform itself to master this epochal challenge.
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Those who cut corners on fiber optic and AI expansion will pay with a loss of prosperity and technological dependence
In a world where artificial intelligence is revolutionizing business models, autonomous systems are controlling factories, and real-time data processing is becoming the standard, digital infrastructure has become a crucial competitive factor. No longer is a location's future viability primarily determined by its highway access or business tax rates, but rather by how reliably, quickly, and securely data can be exchanged, processed, and stored. A corporate network without fiber optics is like a high-bay warehouse without access: expensive, inefficient, and, in a crisis, a bottleneck. For technology and telecommunications companies, the ability to provide and optimize this infrastructure has long since become the core of their competitive advantage.
The foundation of the digital economy
The year 2026 marks the beginning of a new reality for the data center industry. The boundless optimism of the AI age is colliding with the physical limitations of existing infrastructure. Global IT spending is projected to reach approximately $5.43 trillion in 2025, an increase of nearly eight percent year-over-year. The strongest growth is expected in the data center sector: a 42 percent increase, primarily driven by the growing demand for AI infrastructure. Forecasts from the Uptime Institute indicate that global power consumption for generative AI will double this year, exceeding ten gigawatts.
Broadband access is a key challenge in Germany. According to new data from the Federal Network Agency, just under three out of ten households have a fiber optic connection, while gigabit connections are available to three-quarters of households across all technologies. The rollout of 5G is showing remarkable momentum: Deutsche Telekom already achieved its goal of reaching around 99 percent of the population with 5G by the end of 2025 in August of that year. However, this high level of mobile network coverage is only part of the equation. Without a fiber optic connection to every antenna, 5G cannot reach its full potential – neither in terms of speed nor latency. The nationwide use of modern mobile communication standards is therefore directly linked to the expansion of fiber optic networks.
Fiber optics as a location factor
Gigabit networks are a key factor in attracting businesses, driving growth, and creating jobs in entire regions. The Federal Ministry for Digital Affairs and Transport has provided approximately €3.6 billion in funding through its Gigabit Funding 2.0 program, supporting 638,000 additional connections in around 2,300 municipalities. Simultaneously, industry announcements indicate that a total of approximately €50 billion is available for privately funded fiber optic expansion.
The digitalization of businesses depends crucially on how quickly fiber optic networks are extended into buildings and how widely modern mobile networks are available. The increasing use of cloud services and artificial intelligence further increases the demand for high bandwidth. In Austria, digital infrastructure is already explicitly considered key to business location quality, with Vienna, boasting around 21 data centers and a growing number, serving as a digital hub between Eastern and Western Europe. Many of these data centers already rely on 100 percent renewable energy and combine high-tech requirements with stable leases and predictable cash flows.
The AI revolution and its infrastructural consequences
The era in which AI workloads were considered special projects is definitively over. By 2026, artificial intelligence will establish itself as a permanent, continuous industrial workload with massive physical consequences. The focus is shifting from pure high-performance planning to an "AI-ready-by-design" approach, centered on advanced cooling concepts and an infrastructure tailored to the specific requirements of AI accelerators. With the relocation of AI functions to the network edge, the technical requirements are changing dramatically: Simple server rooms are no longer needed, but rather highly dense mini-data centers that adapt hyperscale technologies to the smallest possible footprint.
In parallel, the EU is tightening regulations. Key parts of the EU AI Act will become mandatory from August 2026, making voluntary measures in governance, transparency, and risk analysis obligatory. AI compliance will thus become an integral part of corporate strategy. At the same time, the enormous energy demands of AI are colliding with stricter EU regulations such as the NIS-2 Directive. For data centers, compliance with regulatory requirements is becoming a matter of strategic survival.
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Europe's AI dream in danger: Only 9 percent of companies are truly ready
The global race for digital sovereignty
The announcement of the Stargate initiative in the US, which aims to invest up to $500 billion in American AI infrastructure, has drastically intensified the global race for digital supremacy. For Europe, this is a wake-up call: those who fail to act now risk falling permanently behind and becoming mere spectators in the game of technological superpowers. Digital sovereignty is no longer an abstract demand, but a strategic necessity to safeguard Europe's independent ability to act.
The EU is responding with the InvestAI Facility, which includes a new European fund of €20 billion to create up to five AI gigafactories. By 2025/2026, at least 15 AI factories and several antennas, connected to AI-optimized supercomputers, are expected to be operational. At least nine new AI-optimized supercomputers will be procured and deployed across the EU, more than tripling the current AI computing capacity of EuroHPC. Total investments by the Commission, Member States, and associated countries in high-performance computing infrastructure between 2021 and 2027 will reach €10 billion through the EuroHPC Joint Undertaking.
However, these figures are put into perspective when viewed globally: the €20 billion of the InvestAI facility stands in stark contrast to the $500 billion of the American Stargate initiative. The Cisco AI Readiness Index revealed that only nine percent of European companies are fully prepared for AI. This gap is worrying, because without high-performance data centers and internet exchange points, the potential of AI remains untapped
AI is merely a vision. The economic dimension is enormous: around 5.9 million jobs in Germany depend on cloud-based business models, and the added value generated by digital infrastructures amounts to approximately 250 billion euros.
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The transformation of the telecommunications industry
The telecommunications industry is undergoing a fundamental transformation. Innovation is no longer defined by network size, but by automation, intelligent networking, and orchestration. Tier 1 communications service providers are accelerating their investments in AIOps, private 5G, and cloud integration, thereby undergoing a structural shift from bandwidth providers to digital service orchestrators.
The next wave of telecom differentiation is AI-powered operational intelligence. AT&T, Vodafone, and Deutsche Telekom are leading the deployment of AIOps platforms that automate anomaly detection and predictive maintenance, transforming operational efficiency into a competitive advantage. By mid-2026, 70 percent of Tier 1 service providers are expected to deploy AIOps across their core networks to reduce operating costs by 15 to 20 percent. Since the second quarter of 2025, over $1.8 billion has been invested in telecom AI and automation companies.
Private 5G is moving from the pilot phase to becoming a profit center. Business demand for secure, localized connectivity – particularly in manufacturing, logistics, and healthcare – is driving telecommunications providers to bundle managed edge computing with their own 5G networks. By 2026, it is expected that 25 percent of enterprise network spending will be tied to edge-based managed services.
Europe's answer to the infrastructure race
Deutsche Telekom sees itself as a key digital infrastructure partner in Germany and positions the combination of fiber optics, 5G, and cloud computing as a driver of innovation. Fiber optics ensure stability, 5G real-time capability, and cloud computing scalability, according to a Telekom representative. Together, they enable innovation where it originates and is needed: in manufacturing, logistics, retail, and healthcare. Digital sovereignty is thus becoming a competitive advantage.
The EU must now act to stimulate investment in secure, resilient, and energy-efficient digital infrastructure. The proposed Digital Networks Act and the Cloud and AI Development Act aim to create a dynamic framework that supports next-generation technologies. Concrete steps include ambitious AI funding programs, a targeted revision of the Open Internet Directive to unlock innovative business models, and access to the upper 6 GHz band for Wi-Fi, which is essential for applications such as automated manufacturing, IoT, AR, and VR.
The next generation of infrastructure must also be energy-efficient and leverage innovations such as AI-powered load balancing, advanced cooling, and the networking of distributed data centers. This is because the growing computing demands of AI are in tension with sustainability goals. While 62 percent of the executives surveyed by Gartner see AI as a crucial competitive factor for the next ten years, the question of how to reconcile digital transformation and climate neutrality will be the key issue of the coming decade. Digital infrastructure will determine not only economic competitiveness but also Europe's ability to keep pace in the global AI race without compromising its values and sovereignty.
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