OVHcloud opens its first Asia Pacific edge location inside New Zealand

For a long time, businesses in New Zealand have had to tolerate the latency that comes with data traveling across oceans before returning an answer. OVHcloud‘s newly activated Auckland Local Zone changes that calculus in a meaningful way.

The French cloud operator confirmed this week that its Auckland edge location is now live, marking its first Local Zone deployment across the entire Asia Pacific region. The announcement, shared through the company’s official Facebook page, emphasized three things regional businesses have consistently asked for: low latency, local data residency, and cost predictability as operations grow.

The timing reflects something real. Businesses running latency-sensitive services such as real-time analytics, video streaming, content delivery, and cloud gaming cannot afford the performance penalties that come with distant infrastructure. Having compute, block storage, and networking resources anchored within New Zealand addresses those concerns without requiring organizations to rethink their broader cloud strategy.

OVHcloud is hosting the location through a partnership with Auckland-based operator Datacentre220, which runs its facility on 220 Queen Street in central Auckland. The site already houses names like Cloudflare, Megaport, and One NZ, giving the location an established connectivity foundation. Datacentre220 CEO Ross Delaney described OVHcloud’s selection of the site as a genuine signal of confidence in New Zealand’s digital infrastructure.

Terry Maiolo, OVHcloud’s VP and General Manager for Asia Pacific, pointed to digital sovereignty as a central motivation. Local data residency compliance, he noted, reinforces the company’s commitment to giving regional customers control over where their information actually lives.

This Auckland launch sits inside a broader expansion push. OVHcloud has rolled out more than a dozen Local Zones across Europe, Africa, and the Americas since announcing the program in 2024, with the underlying technology acquired from Gridscale. The company also operates more than 40 core data centers across France, Canada, the United States, Australia, Germany, Singapore, India, and several other markets.

On the financial front, the company’s H1 2026 financial performance report indicated that revenues stood at 555.3 million euros, up 3.6 percent, with the Public Cloud revenues growing by 15.1 percent. The Auckland deployment adds geographic momentum to a business segment that is clearly accelerating.

For New Zealand businesses, the practical implication is straightforward. Enterprise-grade cloud infrastructure is now considerably closer than it used to be.

 

 

 

 

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