India is set for rapid data center market growth, backed by its demographics, talent, and geography, according to a Goldman Sachs report. The rise of AI is expanding the market but also presents challenges like power shortages and new infrastructure needs.
India is poised to expand its footprint in the data center market at a rapid pace, anchored by "favorable demographics, a deep pool of engineering talent, and a strategic geographic proximity to the Middle East," according to a Goldman Sachs Research report.

The report highlighted India, Japan, and the Philippines as the primary growth engines in the Asian region. While government-backed initiatives drive aggressive expansion in Japan, and reduced red tape aids the Philippines, India stands out due to its structural and geographic advantages.
Asia's Robust Data Center Outlook
The broader outlook for data centers across Asia remains exceptionally robust, featuring a broad and steep growth curve. Traditional cloud workloads continue to expand alongside new graphics processing unit (GPU) and artificial intelligence-first demand, which increases the total market size instead of shifting existing capacity.
"The outlook for data centers in Asia is exceptionally robust, characterized by a broad and steep growth curve," the report stated. "Traditional cloud workloads continue to grow alongside new GPU and AI-first demand, expanding the total market size rather than simply redistributing it."
Infrastructure Bottlenecks a Primary Constraint
However, the report mentioned that regional operators face significant infrastructure bottlenecks, specifically regarding power availability, which affects construction timelines and delivery capabilities across Asia. Resolving grid infrastructure issues typically requires years or decades, making power a primary constraint.
Operational Adaptations and Innovative Solutions
To circumvent resource limitations, operators are adopting tailored regional approaches. As per the report, in Mumbai, facilities are sourcing treated wastewater from nearby purification plants rather than drawing from potable water sources, allowing them to balance water scarcity while achieving highly efficient power usage effectiveness levels.
AI's Impact on Customer Demand and Design
The report further detailed how the rise of artificial intelligence is altering customer timelines and infrastructure designs. Single-tenant AI customers are committing to orders well before construction starts to secure bespoke designs, whereas traditional multi-tenant customers expect much shorter lead times.
"The rise of AI is fundamentally changing customer timelines and infrastructure needs," the report added. "Single-tenant AI customers are committing to orders well before construction starts to lock in bespoke designs, whereas traditional multi-tenant customers expect much shorter lead times."
Geopolitical Shifts and Evolving Timelines
Geopolitics and regulatory shifts have introduced higher compliance overhead across the sector, forcing operators to extend due diligence beyond direct customers to ultimate end-users and supply chain participants.
"Furthermore, new AI-first customers and neoclouds move at a radically different commercial speed, pushing for modular and prefabricated designs to compress delivery timelines," the report added.
Despite these operational adjustments, the underlying demand momentum for data center capacity in the region has not been deterred. (ANI)
(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by Asianet Newsable English staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)