Capacity Momentum Anchored in Recent Additions
India data center capacity is on course to reach about 1.7 GW by the end of 2026. The increase follows roughly 220 MW added during the year. The trajectory extends from 1.5 GW of colocation capacity across the top seven cities by late 2025. Annual additions remained above 200 MW, underscoring steady market depth. Although 2025 additions trailed 2024 levels, growth stayed consistent and investment-backed.
Policy Signals Shape Market Confidence
Government-led digital initiatives continue to support scale-up. The Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology advances programs such as IndiaAI and the Digital Personal Data Protection Act, alongside a proposed National Data Centre Policy. These measures aim to reduce friction and improve certainty for operators.
Gautam Saraf, Executive MD at Cushman & Wakefield, said, “strengthening the national power grid and streamlining state-level approvals are foundational steps.”
Connectivity Upgrades Expand Geographic Reach
New subsea connectivity is expected to unlock the next phase. Cable landing stations planned for Digha in West Bengal, and expansions in Mumbai and Chennai, should improve redundancy and bandwidth. Operators also increase edge deployments in Tier-II cities, including Bhubaneswar, Guwahati, and Lucknow. The strategy targets lower latency and broader enterprise access.
Demand Outlook Flags a Mid-Term Supply Gap
By 2030, capacity could reach 3 GW. Projections, however, point to a widening gap by 2033. Demand may rise to 6,043 MW, while supply could reach 4,501 MW, leaving a 1,542 MW shortfall. Policy design remains central to closing the gap.
Amit Sarin, MD of Anant Raj Ltd, said, “proposed policy measures, such as income tax exemptions tied to capacity, power efficiency, and job creation, are crucial for bridging this gap.”
Incentives Target Scale, Resilience, and Sustainability
The draft policy outlines a potential 20-year tax holiday tied to milestones. It also proposes essential-services status, data center economic zones, and dedicated building codes. Renewable energy incentives aim to align growth with sustainability targets. Together, these levers seek to improve capital efficiency and operating resilience.
Execution Risks and Investor Implications
Land availability and round-the-clock power remain binding constraints. Future progress hinges on integrating connectivity, power security, and sustainability within clear regulations. Saraf added that the next phase will depend on operators executing across these fronts. With structural under penetration persisting, the market presents opportunities to build scalable platforms aligned with India’s digital expansion.
