As states compete for data centers, execution surpasses sops
Power and execution, not policies, now decide India’s
data centre race
As Indian states compete to attract data centre investments
amid rising demand from cloud computing and artificial intelligence, industry
executives say execution on the ground — not policy announcements — has
become the key differentiator.
States such as Karnataka, Telangana, Maharashtra,
Gujarat, Uttar Pradesh, Odisha, Tamil Nadu, Haryana and West Bengal have
rolled out data centre policies and incentives. However, companies say success
now depends on how quickly governments can deliver power connections,
approvals and infrastructure.
Power remains the biggest requirement
Uninterrupted and high-capacity electricity is the most
critical need for data centres, which typically require 40–200 MW or more
of power.
“Getting the right kind of power, substations and capacity
is extremely important. Power will always remain a major priority where we need
government and regulatory support,” said Alok Bajpai, managing director
(India) at NTT Data.
Beyond generation capacity, operators need timely access to substations,
high-voltage lines and expandable infrastructure. Companies are also
increasingly looking for collaboration with state governments on renewable
energy and land availability to ensure sustainable growth.
Proximity to customers matters
Apart from power, proximity to customers is another key
factor in choosing locations.
“Companies prefer to be closer to their clients. For example, Microsoft has
many large customers in Hyderabad, which makes the city attractive,” said Srihari
Srinivasan, director and lead for data centre services at Savills India.
Executives warn that without faster approvals and
coordination between governments and private players, India could face capacity
constraints in the coming years.
Infrastructure execution over incentives
While incentives such as green tariffs, open-access power
rules and electricity-duty exemptions help improve project viability, industry
leaders say predictability and execution matter more than policy
announcements.
“Fast approvals and the ability to operationalise policies
on the ground are critical,” said Sharad Agarwal, CEO of Sify
Technologies’ data centre business. He added that companies prioritise
locations with strong transmission and distribution infrastructure.
According to Surajit Chatterjee, managing director
and head of data centres at CapitaLand Investment, factors such as submarine
cable landing stations, proximity to enterprises and existing infrastructure
play a decisive role in shaping data centre hubs.
Mumbai, Chennai lead capacity additions
Mumbai and Chennai continue to dominate India’s data centre
market due to their strong connectivity and customer concentration.
India currently has 1.5 GW of data centre capacity,
which is expected to grow to 14 GW by 2035, driven by AI, cloud and 5G
adoption, according to a PwC India report.
In the first half of 2025:
- Mumbai
accounted for 47% of new capacity
- Chennai
added 30%
- Bengaluru
contributed 14%, according to Savills India Research
Expansion into smaller cities
While major hubs lead growth, companies are also exploring
smaller cities. Datasamudra, part of Teleindia Datacenter, plans a 35–40
MW AI-focused data centre in Mangaluru and 5 MW edge facilities in
Mysuru and Hubballi-Dharwad.
Many global players prefer entering India through joint
ventures with local partners, as navigating land, power and approvals can
be complex. For example, Meta Platforms is reportedly in talks with Sify
Technologies to build a 500 MW hyperscale AI data centre in
Visakhapatnam.
Big investments announced
Several large commitments were announced recently:
- Infrakey
Datacenter Parks signed an agreement with Telangana to build a 1 GW
AI data centre with an investment of ₹70,000 crore
- Singapore-based
AGIDC committed ₹67,500 crore for an international gateway data
centre in Telangana
- Microsoft
plans to launch its Hyderabad data centre by June next year as part of its
$3 billion India investment
- NTT
Data has opened a new campus in Bengaluru and plans to invest over ₹2,400
crore