

Nscale, an AI data center startup, has secured $2 billion at a valuation of $14.6 billion, as the company disclosed on Monday, amidst the ongoing AI infrastructure surge.
This Series C involved Nvidia, led by Aker ASA and 8090 Industries, with contributions from Astra Capital Management, Citadel, Dell, Jane Street, Lenovo, Linden Advisors, Nokia, and Point72.
Nscale is also unveiling three new board directors, comprising former Meta COO Sheryl Sandberg, former UK Deputy Prime Minister and Meta executive Nick Clegg, and former Yahoo President Susan Decker.
Established in 2024, Nscale has become a significant contributor to AI infrastructure, specializing in the development of data centers and providing cloud computing services.
This UK-based startup has attracted considerable funding over the past year as investors flock to the industry. It revealed a $1.4 billion delayed draw term loan in February and a $1.1 billion Series B in September.
The new capital includes the $433 million pre-Series C SAFE round announced in October.
The newly acquired funds will facilitate Nscale’s advancement of vertically integrated AI infrastructure — spanning GPU compute, networking, data services, and orchestration software — throughout Europe, North America, and Asia, according to a company statement.
The AI boom is “prompting the largest infrastructure expansion in human history,” stated Josh Payne, CEO and founder of the UK-based Nscale, echoing earlier remarks from Jensen Huang, CEO of Nvidia, which is an investor in the current funding. “We are constructing this foundational base that underpins the market, the engine driving superintelligence.”
Nscale is planning for an initial public offering, as the company confirmed to CNBC in October.
The startup, with data centers located in the U.K., the U.S., Norway, Portugal, and Iceland, has secured agreements with numerous Big Tech firms lately.
Nscale announced an “expanded partnership” with Microsoft in October, securing $14 billion, a number initially reported by the FT and confirmed by CNBC. Earlier in the summer, it collaborated with OpenAI to launch a Stargate-branded AI data center in Norway.
















