Telecom Summit 2025: Digital Innovation and Sustainable Commitment in its 4th Edition

In its 4th edition, the Telecom Summit focused on generative AI, cloud computing, and cybersecurity as key technological pillars. The event brought together clients, executives, and partners in a space to discuss the most innovative digital solutions. More than 20,000 people watched the event live.
As every year, the Telecom Summit was held in a hybrid format—in-person and virtual—and once again incorporated its sustainable distinctiveness: it offset its carbon footprint by purchasing bonds certified in Argentina, in addition to implementing differentiated waste collection and efficient water and energy management.
“AI brings challenges at both the company and management levels. It must be aligned with the strategic vision and the business. It is essential to seek real and scalable value, with use cases that generate value. We are already working on this premise with two focuses: the customer experience, so they receive personalized service, and the network, so they are capable of self-diagnosing and self-correcting,” highlighted Roberto Nobile, CEO of Telecom.
The event brought together prominent speakers, strategic partners, and industry executives , who presented cutting-edge solutions, technological trends, and success stories that are shaping the course of corporate business in the country.
There were talks from various industry leaders.
This is a key space for connecting with more than 1,200 corporate clients . It also allows the community to share emerging technological trends, initiatives, investments, and how the firm is preparing for the future.
“Once a year, we change our perspective: we stop reviewing the past and focus on what's next. In an environment of accelerated innovation, every few months a model or concept emerges that redefines the rules. Technology advances at such a speed that it surprises us daily with unprecedented achievements, demanding constant adaptation,” explains Julio Hutka, B2B Business Director at Telecom.
“The first big concept was connectivity: connecting everything. That process, which took several years, is now consolidated with low-orbit satellites, capable of connecting even the most remote sensor on a power transmission line or oil pipeline. Then came the cloud era: computing and storing in an intangible space became an everyday reality, to the point that most organizations now operate in hybrid systems,” says Hutka.
Now a new phase begins, says the executive, and it is the intelligent phase. On top of the connected and cloud-based, a layer of intelligence is added, making each system more autonomous and efficient. What seemed like an exaggeration is advancing much faster than expected.
Julio Hutka - B2B Business Director at Telecom.
“Behind this transformation lies a hidden aspect: high-performance computing capacity, measured in 32-bit floating-point operations, now doubles every six months, whereas it previously doubled every two years,” Hutka says.
This acceleration, as the executive points out, allows for the execution of algorithmic models developed in the 1970s, which are not new in theory, but are new in their practical application thanks to supercomputers and enormous computing density.
“Energy costs are high: there are already data centers that consume 500 megawatts, and some are expected to reach the gigawatt mark in the next 12 to 18 months . To put this into perspective: Argentina's summer peak demand is around 30 gigawatts. The scale of growth is, therefore, exponential.”
The company has 16 data centers in the country, five of which are dedicated to enterprise client workloads, while the rest are for the company's exclusive use. The main one is located in Pacheco, Buenos Aires. With a 10MW capacity, it features hyperscaler infrastructure and is highly occupied.
Clarin