Meta-Reliance Jamnagar Deal Tests India’s AI Data Center Ambition
Meta and Reliance will collaborate on a 168-megawatt AI-enabled data center in Jamnagar, moving their partnership from digital services into infrastructure and testing India as a global AI compute hub.

Meta Moves From Partnership To Compute Capacity
Meta and Reliance Industries are adding an infrastructure layer to a relationship that already spans Jio Platforms and enterprise AI.
The companies announced a 168-megawatt AI-enabled data center partnership in Jamnagar, Gujarat, giving Meta its first disclosed AI infrastructure arrangement in India.
Reliance said the facility can be ready within two years and expanded later.
Meta will lease capacity for global infrastructure and AI computing requirements, which makes the site more than a local enterprise deployment.
It places India inside Meta's wider compute network at a time when AI capacity is becoming a strategic constraint.
The deal builds on Meta's $5.7 billion investment in Jio Platforms in 2020 and a $100 million joint venture launched last year for enterprise AI solutions.
Jamnagar adds the physical layer: design, construction, power, cooling, connectivity and operations.
Reliance Packages Power, Cooling And Operations
Reliance is offering more than data center space.
The agreement puts design, construction, renewable power, connectivity and ongoing operations under the Indian conglomerate.
That structure is important because global AI customers need assured capacity, not only buildings with racks.
The Jamnagar facility is expected to use renewable energy and desalinated seawater for cooling.
Meta has committed to covering the full cost of energy and water needed for its operations there.
Meta also contracted nearly 1 gigawatt of new renewable energy capacity in India through CleanMax and Fourth Partner Energy.
For Reliance, the arrangement turns telecom, energy and digital-service assets into a fuller AI infrastructure offer.
For Meta, it provides a large partner in a market where data center demand is rising quickly and where power sourcing has become part of the commercial test.
India Wants Global AI Workloads
India had about 375 megawatts of installed data center capacity in 2020, and the figure reached around 1.5 gigawatts in 2025.
Industry estimates cited for the market point to more than 8 gigawatts by the end of the decade as cloud adoption, AI workloads and local data processing grow.
New Delhi is supporting that shift with incentives, including tax exemptions through 2047 for foreign cloud providers on overseas services when the workloads are run from Indian data centers.
The Meta-Reliance project fits that policy aim because it could serve global AI computing needs from Indian infrastructure.
The competitive backdrop is already crowded.
Microsoft, Amazon, Google, OpenAI and Uber have announced AI or cloud infrastructure investments in India.
AirTrunk, backed by Blackstone, has outlined a $30 billion plan to build 5 gigawatts of capacity in the country by 2030, while Adani and Tata Consultancy Services have also announced AI-linked data center expansion plans.
The Watchpoint Is Repeatability
The companies did not disclose the agreement's value, the exact AI workloads planned for Jamnagar, or whether Meta will make more AI infrastructure investments in India.
Those omissions limit what can be concluded about the commercial size of the arrangement.
The next test is execution.
If Reliance delivers the site within two years, secures the promised renewable and water resources, and operates the facility for global AI workloads, Jamnagar could become a template for India's pitch as a compute location rather than only a software and services market.















