AI

Yotta to build AI computing hub in India with Nvidia chips

18 February 2026
3 minutes
India data centre company Yotta to build $2bn AI hub with Nvidia Blackwell chips to develop one of the largest AI computing hubs in Asia.
Nvidia, stock background.png
Nvidia, stock background.png

Nvidia is collaborating with next-generation cloud provider Yotta to deliver advanced AI Factories and meet India’s growing need for AI compute.

Announced at the India AI Impact Summit 2026, the collaboration is being designed to enable the country to develop AI models and services that drive innovation. It includes a four-year engagement worth over US$1 billion, during which Nvidia will establish one of the Asia-Pacific’s largest DGX Cloud clusters within Yotta’s infrastructure.

Expected to go live by August this year, the supercluster will be deployed at Yotta’s data centre campus close to New Delhi and will have additional capacity from its facility in Mumbai.

Yotta’s mission is to bring high-end cloud and data centre services to everyone in India with a strong focus on AI. Working with Nvidia, the company has built Shakti Cloud – India’s first AI infrastructure platform, designed to offer high-end computing services to clients looking to develop and deploy large language models (LLMs).

Shakti Cloud is powered by more than 20,000 Nvidia Blackwell Ultra GPUs, with Yotta delivering GPU-dense, high-bandwidth AI cloud services on a pay-per-use model designed to make advanced AI training and inference affordable and compliant for Indian enterprises and public sector customers.

The company, part of billionaire Niranjan Hiranandani’s real estate group, is a partner firm for Nvidia in India and runs data centre campuses in Mumbai, Gujarat, in addition to the site in New Delhi.

Nvidia is also partnering with Indian cloud providers like Larsen & Toubro and E2E Networks to provide AI chip clusters and help build data centres across the country. The chip giant said it is helping AI companies in India with its Nemotron models, a family of Nvidia AI models that businesses can use to build AI chatbots and agents.

The news comes as technology interest in India continues to boom, with many companies from around the world looking to invest in the country. AI is of particular interest, given the country making up 16% of the world’s AI talent pool, according to Bain & Company. Likewise, countries like Adani Group and Anthropic have been looking to the country to expand their own services and boost productivity.

Technology giants like Microsoft and Amazon are also pushing to expand their AI data centre capacity in India, in addition to localising advanced computing infrastructure. This is particularly the case as global supply chains for AI chips are changing amid US export controls.

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