Australia’s AirTrunk to invest $30 billion in India by 2030

Cranes tower over the AirTrunk data centre that is under construction in Western Sydney, Australia, August 13, 2025. REUTERS
SYDNEY, June 5 (Reuters) – Australia’s AirTrunk said on Friday it would invest $30 billion in India within the ​next four years to build out 5 gigawatts ‌of new data centre capacity in the South Asian nation.
Sydney-headquartered AirTrunk, backed by Blackstone and Canadian Pension Plan Investment Board (CPPIB) entered ​the Indian market in April with its purchase ​of Lumina CloudInfra.
The firm’s Indian development pipeline includes ⁠600 megawatts of capacity projects in the key cities ​of Mumbai, Chennai and Hyderabad but the range will ​be increased with the new investment.
Chief Executive Robin Khuda, who met Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Friday, said India was now considered ​one of the Australian company’s most significant long-term investment ​destinations.
“One of the strongest messages we took away from this week ‌was ⁠a genuine sense of urgency. There is a recognition that AI investment is a global race and that capital will flow to places that are prepared to compete ​for it,” ​Khuda said.
“Every market ⁠has strengths and challenges. What investors consistently look for is certainty, coordination and speed.”
India ​is becoming a global hotspot for AI ​development ⁠by offering tax breaks for foreign firms operating from domestic data centres.
Its biggest conglomerates are also stepping up a push ⁠into AI ​and data infrastructure, with Reliance ​and Adani committing about $110 billion and $100 billion, respectively, in February.

Reporting by Scott ​Murdoch in Sydney; Editing by Christopher Cushing and Clarence Fernandez

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