PI Data Centers Unveils 3MW Mumbai Data Center Set for August Launch
Synopsis
Key Takeaways
New Delhi, April 13 (NationPress) Pi Data Centers has officially unveiled the initiation of Phase I for a 3-megawatt data center in central Mumbai, with operations scheduled to commence in August 2026.
The property consultancy firm JLL has acted as the exclusive adviser for the leasing transaction related to Pi's inaugural facility in Mumbai and is also guiding the 23-megawatt expansion aimed at enhancing capacity for hyperscale, colocation, and cloud data centers.
This new Mumbai location will supplement Pi’s current 60-megawatt hyperscale capacity in Amaravati and an additional 3MW data center set to open in Hyderabad by October 2026, as stated in the announcement.
“Our upcoming Central Mumbai data center is designed to be pivotal in meeting India's surging demand for enterprise services, AI-driven transformations, cloud adoption, and data localization,” remarked Kalyan Muppaneni, the Founder, Chairman & CEO of Pi Data Centers.
“The Mumbai facility is carefully designed to cater to the next generation of digital requirements, thereby enhancing our capability to serve enterprises, hyperscalers, and AI-centric businesses across key regions in India,” the announcement further elaborated.
Equipped with cutting-edge infrastructure and a future-oriented design, the data center is built to provide high availability, scalability, and operational resilience, as noted by the firm.
“The surge in AI workloads, digitalization, and cloud services will further fuel our growth. Our operational footprint across Mumbai, Amaravati, and Hyderabad uniquely positions us to combine low-latency access with extensive capacity,” said Rachit Mohan, Managing Director - Data Center Leasing for APAC at JLL.
India's data center sector has seen remarkable growth, expanding at a 24 percent Compound Annual Growth Rate (CAGR) since 2020, with annual absorption nearly doubling over a span of five years.
This surge is driven by robust demand from sectors such as hyperscalers, BFSI, e-commerce, media, and technology. India is positioning itself as a global data center hub, supported by competitive costs, sufficient energy supply, and stable governance.
JLL forecasts that India will witness the addition of 100 GW of new data centers between 2026 and 2030, effectively doubling its global capacity.
Globally, the data center sector is expected to grow at a 14 percent CAGR through 2030, necessitating innovations in energy solutions to address grid challenges. Hyperscalers are anticipated to drive this growth further by adopting a dual strategy of leasing and self-construction.
aar/rad