Tecto Data Centers announced a $2 billion investment plan on April 21, 2026. The plan covers five new data centers across Brazil through 2028. It marks a strategic shift for the Latin America-based operator. Tecto is combining an AI Grid and AI Factory approach with a deliberate push into the enterprise market. The company currently operates seven facilities across Fortaleza and Rio de Janeiro in Brazil and Barranquilla in Colombia. It is backed by CPPIB and GIC, managed by BTG Pactual.
What Tecto Is Building and Where
Five new data centers will launch throughout 2026. Confirmed projects include TPOA1 in Porto Alegre, a 20 MW facility targeting enterprise and cloud workloads in southern Brazil. Additionally, TGRU1 in Santana de Parnaiba is a 200 MW hyperscale campus designed for high-density AI and cloud applications. Three additional sites remain undisclosed. Notably, the expansion targets regions beyond Sao Paulo and Rio de Janeiro. Tecto identifies these as underserved markets where Brazilian enterprises currently lack access to tier-one services locally. Chief Revenue Officer Tito Costa confirmed that companies are often forced to travel to the country’s main hubs for top-tier services, and that Tecto’s regional push directly addresses that gap.
Tecto operates within the same group as V.tal, the largest digital infrastructure company in the Americas. V.tal’s network spans over 450,000 kilometres of fibre optic cable in Brazil. Furthermore, its submarine cable system covers more than 26,000 kilometres, connecting Brazil to six countries including the United States, Argentina, Chile, and Colombia. As a result, Tecto gains a structural advantage in offering integrated AI and cloud infrastructure to enterprise customers who need both compute capacity and high-speed connectivity from a single provider.
The Enterprise Market Shift and Brazil’s Policy Tailwinds
The commercial strategy shift is as significant as the capital commitment. Tecto is expanding its customer base beyond hyperscalers, telecom operators, and cloud providers. The target is large Brazilian enterprises that increasingly treat technology infrastructure as critical to their operations. In February 2026, Brazil’s government approved the Special Tax Regime for Data Center Services, known as ReData. Consequently, the programme creates tax incentives tied to efficiency and sustainability requirements. Tecto’s leadership confirmed the incentives would be useful but not a dependency for the investment plan.
Brazil’s positioning as Latin America’s primary data center destination has accelerated. Abundant renewable energy, competitive land costs, and a rapidly growing digital economy are all driving that momentum. Moreover, the Tecto announcement adds to a wave of major commitments that includes TikTok and CloudHQ’s $3 billion Paulinia campus, alongside expansions by Equinix and Ascenty. Inside the race to secure build-ready data center land captures exactly the dynamic Tecto is moving on, and Brazil is increasingly one of the most strategically significant markets in that race.
