India's Data Centre Boom: How 1.5 GW Capacity Signals Global Tech Dominance

India's data centre industry is experiencing explosive growth that's reshaping the Asia-Pacific digital landscape. The country has crossed the significant 1.5 GW capacity mark thanks to competitive construction costs and massive infrastructure investments. Major cities like Mumbai and Chennai are becoming connectivity hubs with multiple subsea cable projects underway. With AI workloads and cloud adoption accelerating, India is positioned to become a global data centre leader within the next decade.

Key Points: India Data Centre Capacity Surpasses 1.5 GW CBRE Report

  • India's DC capacity grew 30% year-on-year surpassing 1.5 GW milestone
  • Construction costs at $6.8-7.25M per MW beat Japan and Singapore markets
  • 12 new subsea cables connecting Mumbai and Chennai boost global connectivity
  • AI and cloud computing driving 36% CAGR in GPU demand through 2030
3 min read

India's Data Centre capacity poised for massive expansion by 2027; surges past 1.5 GW: CBRE Report

India's data centre capacity exceeds 1.5 GW with 30% YoY growth, driven by AI, cloud computing and $30 billion investments, positioning as APAC digital powerhouse.

"India's strong fundamentals, affordable costs, and large-scale connectivity infrastructure position it to become a global leader in data centre capacity - CBRE Research Report"

New Delhi November 27

India's data centre (DC) industry is witnessing unprecedented momentum, emerging as one of the fastest-growing digital infrastructure markets in the Asia-Pacific region. According to the latest CBRE Research report, India's DC stock surpassed 1.5 GW by Q3 2025, marking a 30 per cent year-on-year growth and cementing the country's position as a regional powerhouse.

The report highlights that India has rapidly climbed the global DC rankings, supported by competitive construction costs, favourable policy incentives, and its expanding digital ecosystem. The country now stands out in the APAC region with construction costs ranging between USD 6.8-7.25 million per MW, considerably lower than markets such as Japan and Singapore.

India's rise is strongly aided by subsea cable infrastructure. Over half of all subsea cables landing in India converge in Mumbai and Chennai, offering global-grade connectivity, enhanced redundancy, and strategic access to the Middle East, Southeast Asia, and Europe.

India has 12 new subsea cable projects underway, expected between 2025 and 2028, which will greatly strengthen its digital backbone.

Mumbai remains the country's largest DC market with over 56 GW installed capacity and strong hyperscaler-driven demand. Chennai, Bengaluru, and Delhi-NCR continue to show robust growth due to cloud services, government demand, and telecom expansion.

Hyderabad, Pune, and Kolkata are emerging as promising Tier-II hubs, each witnessing 15-26 per cent CAGR through 2025.

CBRE projects that AI, cloud computing, big data, IoT, and digital transformation will be the principal growth engines of India's DC market. AI workloads and GPU demand are expected to surge, with India's DC GPU market forecast to grow at 36 per cent CAGR through 2030. Cloud adoption in India is rising faster than APAC peers, driven by over 800 active global capability centres (GCCs) and expanding enterprise digitalisation. The Digital Personal Data Protection Act (2023) continues to push enterprises toward local data storage and processing.

The country has seen over USD 30 billion in cumulative DC investments by Q3 2025, with strong participation from global investors, private equity firms, and hyper-scale cloud operators. The highest investment traction has been recorded in states of Maharashtra, Telangana, Karnataka, Tamil Nadu and West Bengal.

The report notes that India's next generation of DCs is being built with sustainability at its core. Operators are adopting renewable energy sources, water-efficient cooling, circular resource management, and green procurement standards.

The government's push toward energy-efficient DCs is accelerating the adoption of solar, wind, and hybrid power models in new facilities.

With India's digital population rising, OTT consumption booming, and AI workloads multiplying, the country is projected to attract even larger investments between 2026 and 2030. CBRE expects India to remain a priority destination for global hyper-scalers, cloud providers, and GPU-intensive AI operators.

The report highlighted that India's strong fundamentals, affordable costs, and large-scale connectivity infrastructure position it to become a global leader in data centre capacity over the next decade.

- ANI

Share this article:

Reader Comments

R
Rohit P
Great to see the focus on sustainability. Data centres consume massive electricity, so adopting renewable energy and water-efficient cooling is crucial. Hope they implement these green standards properly across all new facilities.
A
Arjun K
Mumbai leading with 56 GW capacity is impressive! But I hope the development spreads to more Tier-II cities. Good to see Hyderabad and Pune growing, but we need better infrastructure in states like UP and Bihar too. Balanced regional development is key.
S
Sarah B
The 36% CAGR growth in GPU market is mind-blowing! This positions India perfectly for the AI revolution. As a tech professional, I can see huge opportunities in AI and cloud computing roles. Exciting times ahead for Indian IT sector!
V
Vikram M
$30 billion investments is huge! But I hope the benefits reach common people through better internet speeds and cheaper cloud services. Sometimes these big numbers don't translate to ground-level improvements for average citizens.
M
Michael C
The subsea cable projects are the real game-changer. Better international connectivity means faster streaming, smoother video calls, and more reliable cloud services for everyone. This infrastructure will support India's digital ambitions for decades.
A
Ananya R
Digital Personal Data Protection Act is working well! Forcing companies to store data locally

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

Leave a Comment

Minimum 50 characters 0/50