
Microsoft has committed $17.5 billion — roughly Rs 1.5 lakh crore — to expand cloud and artificial-intelligence infrastructure in India, marking its largest investment ever in Asia. The announcement came after a meeting between Microsoft chief executive Satya Nadella and Prime Minister Narendra Modi in New Delhi. The funds will flow over the next four years, aimed at building data-centre capacity, upskilling the workforce and strengthening what the company calls “sovereign AI capabilities.”
Under the plan, Microsoft will significantly expand its cloud infrastructure footprint across several Indian states. A new hyperscale data-centre in Hyderabad is expected to go online by mid-2026, complementing existing facilities in Chennai, Pune, Mumbai, along with the company’s Jio-Azure regions in Maharashtra and Gujarat. The investment builds on a $3 billion commitment earlier this year — an amount that had already positioned India as a major node in Microsoft’s global AI ambitions.
Skill-development forms a core pillar of the strategy. The company aims to train millions of Indians in AI and related domains, equipping a growing workforce to design, manage and deploy advanced AI systems. Nadella described the investment as central to India’s “AI-first future,” emphasizing the need for both infrastructure and human capital to realise such a vision.
Industry analysts view the commitment as a signal that multinational technology firms increasingly see India not merely as a consumer market, but as a global hub for cloud and AI development. The scope and scale of Microsoft’s investment reflect a broader shift in the global tech landscape, where companies are betting on India’s large internet-user base and technical talent pool. The move could also encourage other global players to escalate investments, accelerating the pace at which India becomes a major node in the emerging AI economy.
Government officials welcomed the announcement as a boost to India’s ambition to emerge as a technology superpower. As Modi noted after the meeting, global optimism around India’s AI potential is growing — and the new investment is expected to create significant opportunities across industries, particularly for start-ups and youth seeking to build careers in cutting-edge technologies.
The size and ambition of Microsoft’s commitment also suggest that the company expects robust returns from a nation undergoing rapid digital transformation. By combining massive infrastructure build-out with aggressive talent development, Microsoft appears to be laying the groundwork for India to play a central role in shaping the next generation of global AI products and services — from cloud-native applications to enterprise-level AI deployments.
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