HCLTech Commits Initial Rs 3,500 Crore To AI Data Centres And Full-Stack Sovereign AI Push

HCLTech is preparing a major move into AI data centres, committing an initial investment of up to Rs 3,500 crore as it builds a full-stack AI infrastructure business spanning compute, models, software and managed services. The Noida-headquartered IT services company is positioning the plan as a strategic extension of its enterprise AI work rather than a conventional data-centre colocation play.

Chief Executive Officer and Managing Director C. Vijayakumar said during the company’s earnings call that the opportunity is not simply to rent AI capacity but to own the full stack. HCLTech’s stated plan is to combine data-centre infrastructure, compute access, AI models, software and managed services for offerings such as sovereign cloud, secure AI and managed AI infrastructure. The company believes an integrated model can produce higher enterprise value per megawatt than a business focused only on space and power.

The long-term capacity ambition is 50 MW, but management has clarified that the Rs 3,500 crore figure represents the initial investment and will create only a fraction of the planned capacity. HCLTech has not yet disclosed how much capacity the first phase will add. Further capital deployment will be paced against demand, returns and free cash flow from the business.

The company is also trying to manage build-out risk by entering advanced client discussions before operations begin. Management has said it wants committed consumption from the first day and expects to use part of the capacity internally for managed-services and outcome-based contracts with global clients. That structure gives the company a potential internal demand base while it builds external customer adoption.

Vijayakumar has cited three demand drivers: AI-led compute growth, supply constraints in the data-centre market and rising sovereign-data requirements. He expects global data-centre demand to triple by 2030, with AI accounting for around 70% of that expansion. India could grow faster because of supply constraints and stronger localisation requirements.

The move takes HCLTech deeper into the physical and capital-intensive layer of AI infrastructure at a time when Indian IT services firms are trying to define their role in enterprise AI adoption. The eventual test will be whether HCLTech can convert its client relationships, managed-services experience and AI partnerships into a differentiated infrastructure-led business with disciplined capital returns.

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