Key Points

India has emerged as one of the world's most cost-efficient data centre markets with development costs at just USD 7 per watt. This competitive pricing has attracted massive investment, with hyperscale data centre players increasing from 5 to 15 since 2019. State governments are offering substantial incentives including full electricity duty exemptions and power subsidies to boost expansion. Despite representing 20% of global data demand, India currently holds only 3% of operational data centre capacity, indicating significant growth potential.

Key Points: India Data Centre Cost USD 7 per Watt Among Global Lowest

  • India's USD 7/W data centre cost second only to China globally
  • Hyperscale colocation capacity quadrupled over last five years
  • State policies offer 100% electricity duty exemptions and subsidies
  • Regulatory mandates drive domestic data storage requirements
3 min read

Data centre development cost in India at USD 7 per Watt among global lowest, shows strong growth potential: Report

India's data centre development cost at USD 7/W is among world's lowest, driving massive growth with hyperscale capacity quadrupling and strong state incentives.

"Data centre development cost ($/W) is one of the lowest in India at $7/W with only China's cost being lower - Kotak Mutual Fund Report"

New Delhi, September 16

India has emerged as one of the most cost-efficient markets for data centre development in the world, highlighting the country's strong growth potential in this sector, according to a report by Kotak Mutual Fund.

The report said that the data centre development cost in India stands at USD 7 per watt (USD/W), which is one of the lowest among major economies. Only China has a lower cost than India at USD 6 per watt.

In comparison, the cost in Japan is around USD 14/W, in the UK it is USD 11/W, while in the USA, South Korea and Australia it is around USD 10/W.

It stated "Data centre development cost ($/W) is one of the lowest in India at $7/W with only China's cost being lower".

The relatively low development cost is driving strong interest in the Indian market, particularly in the hyperscale colocation segment.

The report mentioned that the number of players in hyperscale data centre development in India has risen sharply from 5 in 2019 to 15 in 2024, reflecting the growing demand. At the same time, the colocation capacities leased to hyperscalers have seen a four-fold jump over the last five years.

The report also highlighted the role of state governments in incentivising data center expansion. For instance, Tamil Nadu's 2021 policy provided 100 per cent subsidy on electricity duty, dual power grid availability, 50 per cent exemption on wheeling charges, and concessional open access charges.

Uttar Pradesh has offered 100 per cent exemption on electricity duty, dual power grid access, 50 per cent exemption on wheeling charges, and 100 per cent exemption on transmission charges along with open access availability.

Telangana's 2016 policy allowed electricity supply at the cost of generation, dual power grid availability, renewable energy under open access, and subsidised fuel prices.

Similarly, Maharashtra in 2023 gave lifetime exemption from electricity duty, Rs 1 per unit power subsidy for five years (outside Zone I), support for captive renewable energy and open-access power.

The report shared that the regulatory environment is also supporting growth. The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) mandated data localisation for the payments sector in 2018, while the Securities and Exchange Board of India (SEBI) issued a similar mandate in 2023 for all its regulated entities.

In addition, the Digital Personal Data Protection Act (DPDP), 2023, though not explicitly mandating localisation, empowers the government to restrict cross-border data transfers, creating indirect incentives for domestic storage and processing.

Currently, India accounts for only 3 per cent of global operational data centre capacity, even though the country represents around 20 per cent of global data demand. Most Indian data continues to be stored outside the country due to higher usage of hyperscale services.

The report noted that this gap, combined with low development costs and favourable policies, creates significant growth opportunities for India's data center sector in the coming years.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

P
Priya S
Great to see state governments like Tamil Nadu and UP offering such good incentives. The electricity duty exemptions and power subsidies will definitely attract more investments. Hope this creates more IT jobs across tier 2 cities too!
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Aman W
While the cost advantage is good, we need to ensure these data centers are sustainable. Hope they're using renewable energy and not just relying on subsidies. Green data centers should be the future focus.
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Sarah B
The data localization mandates by RBI and SEBI are crucial for data sovereignty. With DPDP Act 2023, India is finally taking data security seriously. This will boost domestic data center growth significantly.
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Vikram M
From 5 players in 2019 to 15 in 2024 - that's impressive growth! The hyperscale colocation segment is booming. This will help reduce our dependence on foreign data centers and keep Indian data within our borders.
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Nikhil C
The cost comparison is eye-opening. We're cheaper than US, UK, Japan, and almost at China's level. With our digital population growing, this sector could become the next big thing after IT services. Time to invest in data center stocks maybe? 📈

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