The company says the move formalises more than three decades of thermal engineering experience already applied in hyperscale and colocation facilities worldwide. More than 1,600 Güntner and JAEGGI units are currently deployed across Europe, North America, South America and Asia, delivering over 4.5GW of installed cooling capacity.
Güntner notes that the launch comes at a time when operators are under pressure to expand capacity for AI, cloud and digital services while improving efficiency, reducing water consumption and meeting long-term sustainability targets. With the global data centre market forecast to reach $600–$700 billion by 2030, we provide tailored cooling solutions matched to site conditions, infrastructure requirements, and project timelines, supported by end-to-end project management and service teams.
Evans says the new structure strengthens the company’s ability to support a rapidly growing and increasingly complex sector. He adds that operators need partners capable of working from initial design through to delivery, with the manufacturing scale and technical capability to support projects globally. By building on existing relationships with hyperscalers, the division will be a strategic partner for future developments.