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Data Centres: Boom and Backlash
6MAY

Amazon lifts India bet to $48bn

2 min read
13:52UTC

Amazon's Andy Jassy met Narendra Modi on 25 June and raised Amazon's total India commitment to $48bn, days after CPPIB took a stake in CtrlS and Google committed $15bn to a Visakhapatnam hub. Capital is routing to where consent clears fastest.

IndustryDeveloping
Key takeaway

Hyperscaler capital that cannot site in the US is routing to India, where states compete to host it.

Amazon chief executive Andy Jassy met Prime Minister Narendra Modi on 25 June and lifted Amazon's total India commitment to $48bn, with $13bn of that a new increment for Amazon Web Services (AWS) data-centre capacity in Mumbai and Hyderabad 1. Days earlier, on 17 June, the Canada Pension Plan Investment Board (CPPIB), one of the world's largest infrastructure investors, took a stake of about $840m in CtrlS Datacenters, India's largest rated operator 2. Google is building a $15bn hub in Visakhapatnam with AdaniConneX in parallel.

Three fresh commitments in ten days trace one pattern: capacity flows to where land, power and consent clear fastest. The same logic played out in Europe a month earlier, when SoftBank routed EUR 75bn to French nuclear sites rather than fight the UK grid queue . In the US the answer to who pays and who connects is still contested; in India the state actively solicits the load.

India's production-linked incentives invert the US dynamic. Where Virginia debates how to tax the load and Texas rations grid connections, Indian states subsidise hosting it, so the same campus pencils out differently before a megawatt is drawn. Two caveats temper the trend. Parts of India carry high water stress and less reliable grids, and the CPPIB stake in CtrlS is colocation, renting space and power to tenants, not a hyperscale build of Amazon's or Google's kind.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

When companies cannot build data centres fast enough in the United States or Europe due to power shortages, planning refusals, or long queue times, they look elsewhere. India has emerged as the main alternative in 2026. Three large deals happened within ten days in June. The Canada Pension Plan Investment Board, one of the world's largest pension funds, bought a roughly $840m stake in CtrlS Datacenters, India's largest data-centre company, on 17 June. On 25 June, Amazon's chief executive Andy Jassy met Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi and raised Amazon's total India investment pledge to $48bn, with $13bn going to new Amazon Web Services (AWS) capacity in Mumbai and Hyderabad. Separately, Google is building a $15bn data-centre hub in Visakhapatnam (also called Vizag), a port city in Andhra Pradesh, in partnership with AdaniConneX, an Indian data-centre joint venture. The pattern is similar to an earlier shift (ID:4088) when SoftBank committed EUR 75bn to data centres in France rather than the UK, choosing wherever land, power, and planning consent come together fastest.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

India's attraction for displaced data-centre capital rests on three structural conditions that US and European markets cannot match in the near term.

First, India's electricity grid has substantial headroom in the south and west: Maharashtra (Mumbai) and Andhra Pradesh (Visakhapatnam) have invested heavily in renewable and gas generation without the corresponding load growth, leaving spare capacity that grid operators in Northern Virginia or London exhausted years ago.

Second, India's land-acquisition and environmental-clearance process for industrial facilities is discretionary at the state level. State governments in Maharashtra, Andhra Pradesh, and Telangana can offer fast-tracked clearances as investment incentives, a mechanism unavailable to US county commissions or UK planning authorities operating under statutory timelines.

Third, CPPIB's entry through CtrlS signals that institutional capital now treats Indian data-centre colocation as a core infrastructure asset class, which lowers the cost of debt financing for Indian operators and accelerates the build pipeline. This mirrors the pattern by which European institutional capital entered UK colocation in 2015-2018, normalising Indian data-centre risk within three years.

What could happen next?
  • Consequence

    India's sub-12-month consent velocity for hyperscale campuses in Andhra Pradesh and Maharashtra gives it a structural advantage over Northern Virginia, London, and Frankfurt that will persist as long as those markets remain consent-constrained.

  • Opportunity

    CPPIB's entry into Indian colocation at scale signals the asset class has reached institutional-grade risk profile; sovereign wealth funds and European pension managers are the likely next entrants.

First Reported In

Update #8 · Data centres build their own power plants

CNBC· 28 Jun 2026
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