By Dipesh Ghimire
Reliance, Brookfield and Digital Realty to Invest $11 Billion in AI Mega Center in Andhra Pradesh

Reliance Industries, in partnership with Canada’s Brookfield and the US-based Digital Realty, has announced a massive $11 billion investment to build a large-scale artificial intelligence (AI) infrastructure center in Visakhapatnam, Andhra Pradesh. The state government revealed the development on Wednesday, calling it one of the most significant digital infrastructure projects in India’s history.
The upcoming AI center is planned to be completed within five years and will house a 1-gigawatt high-capacity computing cluster. Such infrastructure is typically associated with global AI hubs and is capable of supporting large-scale model training, data-intensive research projects, and next-generation cloud services. This positions Visakhapatnam as a rising technological hotspot in India.
This investment announcement comes shortly after Google committed $15 billion to build a data center and AI infrastructure facility in the same city. Google’s project is expected to become the company’s largest venture outside the United States, further elevating Visakhapatnam’s importance as an emerging AI corridor in South Asia.
According to the Andhra Pradesh government, the Reliance-led project will help transform the state into a major destination for advanced digital infrastructure and high-performance computing technologies. Officials say the center will create thousands of jobs and attract global talent and technology companies to the region.
Chief Minister N. Chandrababu Naidu expressed strong optimism about the investment. In a statement on social media, he said, “This project will accelerate job creation, enable technological development, and bring world-class investment to Andhra Pradesh.” He also emphasized that such initiatives will strengthen India’s long-term technological progress.
India’s demand for AI and data infrastructure is growing rapidly. Experts estimate that the number of internet users in the country will reach 900 million by the end of this year. With rising digital activity, data storage needs, and the energy-heavy nature of AI operations, the country urgently requires more high-capacity computing centers. The new AI hub is expected to address these future computational demands.
Major American AI companies are also expanding aggressively in India. In October, the AI company Anthropic announced plans to open an office in the country. Its CEO, Dario Amodei, held discussions with Prime Minister Narendra Modi about AI collaboration and local opportunities. This signals a deepening interest among global technology leaders.
Similarly, OpenAI confirmed that it is preparing to establish its own office in India. CEO Sam Altman reported that ChatGPT usage in India has increased four times compared to last year, making the country one of the platform’s fastest-growing user bases. This growth reflects India’s rising dependence on AI tools across industries.
Another AI firm, Perplexity AI, partnered with Indian telecom giant Airtel in July to offer one year of free premium service to 360 million subscribers. This partnership is considered one of the largest AI distribution deals worldwide and highlights India’s massive potential for AI adoption.
Industry analysts believe these developments indicate India’s growing importance in the global AI ecosystem. With the arrival of multi-billion-dollar projects and international AI companies, the country is gradually positioning itself as a major AI innovation and compute hub, capable of influencing global technology trends in the coming decade.









