India’s data center boom, fueled by data sovereignty, 5G and AI is building the backbone of its trillion-dollar digital economy
India is building data center facilities, which will create the infrastructure that will support India’s trillion-dollar digital economy. For decades, the development of data center space had been limited to small, enterprise owned server rooms and has now become a top-level strategic priority for the country. A combination of factors has created the conditions for an unprecedented buildout of data center capacity in India, including, the largest and most data-intensive mobile user base in the world, the roll-out of ubiquitous 5G, a government mandate for data sovereignty, and the rapidly changing demands of artificial intelligence. These factors are creating a massive demand for new data center capacity.
The numbers are defining the size of the Indian data center market. Projections of industry analysts forecast that the total installed power of India’s data centers will reach over 2GW by 2026 from a current level of over 1GW. This is a very significant build-out, and industry analysts believe that India’s data center capacity will grow fivefold by 2030 to over 8GW. This growth is expected to generate over $30B in capital expenditures1.
This is no simple or linear process of scaling-up. There are two powerful, and at times conflicting, drivers of the build-out of India’s data center capacity – a non-negotiable government policy directive for data sovereignty and the existential imperative of ensuring sustainable resources. Every player in the ecosystem of the data center build-out, including the hyperscale companies signing agreements for 200MW, the policymakers writing the regulations for the electric grid, the enterprise CIO selecting their cloud service provider, and the vendors designing the cooling systems will need to navigate this tension to be successful in the coming decade.
The great buildout: Policy, Capital & Geography
The trigger: Data localisation
Data localisation is what is driving the boom in the development of data centers in India today. The Data Protection Decree (DPDP) Act of 2023, combined with existing and future specific mandates from various sectors (e.g., RBI, SEBI), have fundamentally changed the environment in which all parties operate.
Data sovereignty-is the new market driver and not just a bussword.
The geography: Old markets and the new frontier
The battleground is currently concentrated in Mumbai & Chennai markets. These two cities account for over 70 per cent of India’s capacity2. One is a financial hub and the other is the landing station.
We are also seeing the rise of edge computing. To deliver low-latency content like 4K streaming, online gaming, and IoT; data must move closer to the consumer. This is driving operators to explore building smaller, modular data centers in Tier-2 and Tier-3 cities, creating a distributed national data infrastructure.
The fuel: A wall of capital
The $30 billion investment figure is not a projection3. This buildout is being financed by long-term capital from institutional investors around the world. Sovereign wealth funds, PE firms look at Indian data centre market, not as some kind of speculative real estate play, but as a core utility.
The new giant: AI changes all the rules
The industry believed that it was hitting its stride, in applying technologies to build for modern day cloud storage and enterprise IT. It was hit by a new berg which has entered the picture: Artificial Intelligence.
The revolution of AI is not just another workload. A General Capacity Utilisation (GPU) server rack for AI workload, can consume 5 or 6 times as much power and would be dissipating just as much heat; as a conventional server rack. We are moving from the world in which a 10kW rack was high-density, is now considered par for the course.
From D2C cold plates to liquid nitrogen cooling tanks, suppliers are in a hurry to offer them. Operators need to weigh the strategic decision of building ‘AI-ready’ centers, which will come with an enormous cost premium or risk being stuck in “legacy” facilities that are unable to service the next wave of demand. Industry estimates are that 50 per cent of data center capacity could be AI-related within ten years, radically reshaping design and cost, but most importantly energy demand4.
The sustainability mandate: India’s $30 billion challenge
This brings us to the Data Centre’s most existential challenge: power and sustainability. This is where the goals of policymakers and operators need to align.
The unseen hurdles: Talent and Timelines
Beyond the concrete and steel, two unseen hurdles threaten to slow this revolution: people and permits.
The road ahead: A call to action for every stakeholder
India’s data center revolution has reached a critical juncture. Success is not an entitlement; it must be created brick by brick by each player in the ecosystem.
This is a generational opportunity for India to build a digital infrastructure that is not only scalable but also sustainable and sovereign. It is more than an investment; it’s a down payment on India’s digital future. In fact, the build out is happening. The challenge now is to build it smart, green and build it together.
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