Google Officially Confirms New Israel Cloud Region In Development

Google-officially-confirms-new-Israel-cloud-region-in-development

The company confirms new region after recently winning mega cloud contract from Israeli Government

Google has confirmed it is building a new data centre cloud region in Israel.

‘As we continue to meet the growing demand for cloud services in Israel, we’re excited to announce that a new Google Cloud region is coming to Israel to make it easier for customers to serve their own users faster, more reliably, and securely’, Boaz Maoz, Google Cloud’s Israel country manager, said in a post to its Cloud blog.

The company has not provided a date for when the region will be available.

GCP finally confirms region after winning Nimbus contract

The search giant has long been thought to be building a region in the country, as it was one of the companies in the running for the Government’s Nimbus Cloud project which required local hosting infrastructure.

Earlier this month Israeli publication Haaretz claimed Google was ‘negotiating with a number of operators of server farms in Israel.’

Google, alongside AWS, was recently awarded the $1.2 billion tender to provide cloud services to Israeli government agencies.

‘AWS and Google – the Rolls-Royce and the Masarati of the cloud world!’, said Shahar Bracha, Acting CEO of Government ICT Authority, Government CIO, Prime Minister’s Office. ‘Two of the world’s leading cloud companies will build a cloud centre in Israel (Data Centre) and provide services to the Israeli government, the public sector, the IDF, and other bodies.’

Also Read: How to Position Your Organisation for Success With Cloud

Microsoft, Oracle, and IBM were also in the running for the contract. Oracle says its data centre in the country is still on track, but the company is also reportedly challenging the Finance Ministry’s decision not to award it the contract.

Microsoft’s data centre in the country was recently pushed back to ‘early 2022’ which was thought to have been a factor in it losing out to AWS and Google and is also reportedly appealing the decision not to be given the contract.

Google reported quarterly losses of $974 million for its Cloud division in its most recent results.