Sustainability Magazine September 2025 Issue 56 | Page 120

Baltic data centre group Delska has expanded its infrastructure capacity as AI workloads push power requirements of up to 250kW per rack
DELSKA
Baltic data centre group Delska has expanded its infrastructure capacity as AI workloads push power requirements of up to 250kW per rack

The Baltic data centre market is transforming as regional operators position themselves to capture growing demand from global hyperscalers and AI workloads. Leading this change is Delska, a newly unified infrastructure group born from the merger of established Latvian and Lithuanian companies, now operating facilities and networks spanning from the Baltics to Frankfurt.

At the helm is Chief Executive Andris Gailitis, a 30-year industry veteran who witnessed the birth of the commercial Internet in the region. Starting as a university technician in 1999, when Internet access was largely restricted to academic institutions and wealthy corporations, he has guided the company through decades of technological evolution and today his approach remains focused on core infrastructure rather than chasing software trends.
“ We are a pure infrastructure player, and we are doing the best with a deep expertise in the data centres and network field,” says Andris.
This infrastructure-first strategy has proved prescient. Data centres no longer just support business functions but have become critical infrastructure, with technology services now ranking alongside traditional industries in importance.
120 September 2025