Meta is making its first AI infrastructure bet in India, striking a data centre partnership with conglomerate Reliance Industries in a market rapidly emerging as a hub for AI infrastructure as global technology firms scramble to secure the computing power needed to train and deploy AI systems.
The partnership, announced Wednesday, will see Meta collaborate with Reliance on a 168-megawatt AI-enabled data centre in Jamnagar, Gujarat. The deal expands a relationship that has evolved from Meta’s multibillion-dollar investment in Reliance’s Jio Platforms to a $100 million joint venture launched last year to develop enterprise AI solutions for customers in India and overseas markets.
The deal comes as India cements its status as a natural destination for AI infrastructure investment. Companies including Microsoft, Amazon, Google, OpenAI and Uber have recently announced AI and cloud infrastructure investments in the country, which has rapidly expanded its data centre footprint in recent years. The rush extends beyond global technology firms — earlier this week, Blackstone-backed AirTrunk announced plans to invest $30 billion to build 5 gigawatts of data centre capacity in India by 2030, while Indian conglomerates including Adani and Tata Consultancy Services have also unveiled major data centre expansion plans aimed at supporting AI workloads.
New Delhi has sought to attract such investments through policy incentives, including tax exemptions through 2047 for foreign cloud providers on services sold overseas — provided those workloads are run from Indian data centres. India’s installed data centre capacity has risen from about 375 megawatts in 2020 to around 1.5 gigawatts in 2025, according to government data. Industry estimates project that figure could grow more than fivefold to over 8 gigawatts by the end of the decade, driven by cloud adoption, AI workloads and rising demand for local data processing.
The Meta-Reliance agreement marks the latest chapter in a relationship that has steadily deepened since Meta invested $5.7 billion in Jio Platforms in 2020. Since then, the companies have expanded their collaboration across digital services, enterprise AI and now the infrastructure underpinning next-generation AI systems.
As part of the partnership, Meta is leasing capacity at Reliance’s new Jamnagar facility, which the companies said will be powered by renewable energy and cooled using desalinated seawater. Meta has committed to covering the entire cost of the energy and water required to support its operations there. Reliance said the 168-megawatt facility will be ready within two years and can be expanded over time. The data centre will also support Meta’s global infrastructure and AI computing requirements, plugging India more directly into the company’s worldwide network of AI facilities.
Under the agreement, Reliance said it would provide end-to-end services ranging from design and construction to renewable power, connectivity and ongoing operations — a sign of the conglomerate’s ambitions to become a one-stop shop for AI infrastructure among global technology companies. Separately, Meta said it had contracted nearly 1 gigawatt of new renewable energy capacity in India through agreements with CleanMax and Fourth Partner Energy, which will supplement the renewable power supporting the Jamnagar facility.
The companies did not disclose the value of the agreement, the type of AI workloads that will run from the facility, or whether Meta plans additional AI infrastructure investments in India.





