India’s rise as a preferred destination for hyperscale data centers is no longer being driven by cost arbitrage alone. According to Commerce and Industry Minister Piyush Goyal, the real differentiator is structural: a single, integrated national power grid paired with rapid renewable expansion that can support the scale and reliability modern digital infrastructure demands.
Speaking in New Delhi, Goyal pointed to India’s 500-GW unified grid, among the largest single-frequency networks globally, as a foundational advantage for power-intensive facilities such as hyperscale data centers and Global Capability Centers (GCCs). Unlike fragmented systems, the integrated grid allows operators to manage redundancy and absorb sudden demand spikes without compromising stability.
That capability, Goyal suggested, is increasingly decisive as data centers evolve into round-the-clock, mission-critical infrastructure rather than auxiliary IT assets. Grid resilience and load management, not just electricity prices, are now shaping location decisions.
The minister contrasted today’s environment with conditions a decade ago. Since 2014, India has undertaken sweeping power-sector reforms, addressing coal shortages, fragmented transmission, and supply uncertainty. Over that period, solar generation capacity has expanded nearly 46 times, while wind capacity has grown 2.5 times, reshaping the country’s energy mix and improving predictability for large industrial consumers.
Crucially for data center operators, the government’s push to rationalize coal linkages and curb imports has also contributed to tariff stability. With power representing a substantial share of operating costs, predictable pricing has become as important as availability.
Looking ahead, Goyal framed nuclear energy as the missing piece in ensuring 24/7 clean power for digital infrastructure. He highlighted the SHANTI Bill, currently before Parliament, which seeks to open the nuclear sector to private participation and enable deployment of Small Modular Reactors (SMRs). These reactors, he said, would provide steady baseload power to complement intermittent renewable sources such as solar and wind.
In Goyal’s telling, the policy direction reflects a broader, five-pillar approach to the power sector: universal access, affordability, availability, financial viability, and long-term sustainability. Together, these pillars are intended to support not just households and traditional industry, but the fast-growing digital economy that depends on uninterrupted electricity.
