Rowan Digital Infrastructure is publicly reaffirming a long-term commitment to Frederick County after a report suggested it might sell the business.
The Information reported that strong investor interest has Rowan weighing new capital raises or even a potential sale, signaling that its data center assets are in high demand.
For AI infrastructure, that kind of investor pressure usually points to growth in GPU-ready capacity and power-hungry build-outs, not retreat.
Local concern matters because zoning, power delivery, and community buy-in will shape how fast Rowan can actually stand up or expand data center facilities in Frederick.
I read this as Rowan trying to calm local politics while keeping strategic options open with investors, which is a common pattern in the current AI data center land rush.
The original piece is still useful for tracking how a second-tier market like Frederick positions itself in the wider AI data center footprint.
Source: Data center developer Rowan says it is committed to Frederick | Data Centers | fredericknewspost.com