India's data center market to open USD 35 bn window for industrial equipment manufacturers: Report
New Delhi, June 3
India's industrial equipment manufacturers will likely dig a capex opportunity of USD 35 billion, profiting from India's growing data center industry, says Nomura. The Indian DC industry is growing at a rapid speed with DC IT load increasing from ~350MW in 2019 to ~1.5-1.6GW in 2025, reflecting a ~29 per cent CAGR versus ~20 per cent globally, it said.
The brokerage firm noted that the DC industry is expected to grow to "~7GW, at a CY25-30F CAGR of +30%" unlocking attractive opportunities for industrial equipment manufacturers.
"We estimate incremental capacity of ~5.1GW until CY30F will provide a capex opportunity of USD 35 billion, a majority of which will be captured by industrial equipment manufacturers supplying electrical/mechanical and cooling solutions to DCs," said Nomura.
"India's share in global DC capacity consequently increased from ~1.5% in 2019 to ~2-3% in 2025. Our analysis, based on announced pipelines, suggests the industry has visibility on +15GW of incremental capacity over the next decade, and we expect India's DC capacity to reach ~7GW by CY30F (+30% CAGR)," it said.
The industry is being supported by increasing cloud/AI adoption and rapid digitalization. Furthermore, "India remains cost-efficient with construction costs of ~USD6-7mn/MW versus ~USD10-18mn/MW across developed APAC and Western markets," noted Nomura.
"In our view, competitive electricity sourcing at ~USD7c-8c/KW through open access, renewable PPAs, and captive power arrangements further strengthens India's operating cost advantage," it said.
At the same time, the DC industry, led by "led by a large announced pipeline (+15GW) on the supply front," is creating favorable prospectus for the industrial equipment manufacturers owing to "robust demand and sustainable premium pricing trends," noted Nomura.
"Companies operating in switchgear, transformers, generator sets, UPS systems, cooling equipment, and rack infrastructure should benefit from sustained premium pricing and multi-year order visibility. Overall, this presents a compelling long-term opportunity across both DC developers and broader supply chain," the report added.
The brokerage firm further noted that "the most attractive exposure is in the industrial supply chain, for investors. "We estimate five product categories: (i) medium- and low-voltage switchgear and transformers, (ii) UPS and battery systems, (iii) backup diesel and gas gensets, (iv) precision cooling and liquid-cooling distribution units, and (v) rack, busway, and structured cabling infrastructure together absorb 60-75% of a DC's USD10-22mn/MW capex budget," it said.
— ANI
Reader Comments
As someone working in IT, I see the demand for data centers exploding. But the electricity consumption will be massive. Hope we can source enough renewable energy to power these DCs, otherwise it defeats the purpose of 'Digital India' if we burn more coal. 🖥️⚡
Interesting read. The cost advantage of India ($6-7mn/MW vs $10-18mn in developed markets) is what makes this attractive for global investors. But regulatory hurdles and land acquisition remain challenges. Still, a bullish outlook for equipment makers. 📊
All good on paper, but will this translate to jobs for Indian engineers? Or will we just import equipment and assemble here? Need to focus on Make in India for these high-value components like cooling systems and UPS. 🇮🇳🔧
The 5.1GW incremental capacity by 2030 is massive. I wonder how this will affect real estate prices in areas near these DCs. Also, reliability of power supply is key - India still has grid issues in some states. Hope they build redundancy. 💡🏗️
As a small business owner in the electrical equipment space, this gives me hope. But the entry barrier is high for us - we need better access to credit and technology from the government. Otherwise, it'll be the same old story of big corporates eating the pie. 🤝💪
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