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Agency official hails Three Seas nations as hub for energy and investment
Summary
An agency official praised Central and Eastern European "Three Seas" nations as emerging centers for energy infrastructure and investment, citing a claimed $50,000,000,000 data center project in Croatia and multibillion-dollar regional energy deals.
An agency official praised Central and Eastern European "Three Seas" nations on the grounds that they are quickly becoming centers for new energy infrastructure and private investment. He said his visit reflects a search for "dynamism" and new economic growth beyond traditional Western European capitals.
The official said these countries "have in just the last few decades tasted full freedom again, and they are dynamic societies," and argued that growing investment is reshaping parts of the region. "I was thrilled with our ambassador, here and the great leaders in Croatia to hear the announcement of a 50,000,000,000 investment in Croatia to build a massive data center and the power production needed to support that," he said, calling the project "the greatest investment in Croatian history." The statement was presented as a report of what he had been told by Croatian leaders; the transcript does not include supporting documents or additional local confirmation.
He named Croatia and neighboring countries as beneficiaries of recent deals, saying multibillion-dollar agreements are intended to "build the energy system, to better energize Croatia, and also deliver energy to Bosnia, to Albania, to Montenegro, to Serbia, to Slovenia, to Hungary, to Slovakia." The official characterized the projects as examples of the region's ability to attract large-scale energy and data infrastructure.
Why it matters: Large energy and data-center investments can alter regional economic trajectories and create demand for power generation and transmission. The official framed such deals as evidence that the Three Seas nations could help revive broader European industrial growth and optimism.
The official closed by saying he was "very bullish on the future of these countries" and invited questions from the audience; the transcript records no immediate corroborating materials or responses from Croatian officials within this session.

