
Oracle has launched Oracle Database@Google Cloud in India, making its flagship database services available directly within Google Cloud’s Mumbai region as enterprises increasingly embrace multicloud architectures. The launch enables organisations to run Oracle Exadata Database Service on Dedicated Infrastructure, Oracle Autonomous AI Database, and Oracle Autonomous AI Lakehouse inside Google Cloud’s Asia South 1 region, while ensuring that data remains within India to comply with local regulatory and data residency requirements.
“As enterprises in India increasingly adopt multicloud strategies, Oracle Database@Google Cloud provides the flexibility, performance, scale, and security they need,” said Shailender Kumar, Senior Vice President and Regional Managing Director, Oracle India. He added that customers can now combine Oracle’s AI-powered database capabilities with Google Cloud’s AI and analytics tools to support a wide range of modern enterprise workloads.
The India launch is part of Oracle and Google Cloud’s broader effort to simplify multicloud deployments by allowing customers to access Oracle databases natively within Google Cloud, without the complexity of cross-cloud data movement. By running Oracle databases on Oracle-managed infrastructure colocated in Google Cloud data centres, enterprises can achieve low latency, high performance and consistent operational experience while using Google Cloud services.
Google Cloud said the offering will help Indian organisations modernise applications faster and migrate mission-critical workloads more efficiently. “Oracle Database@Google Cloud combines Google Cloud’s AI and analytics with Oracle’s database services to help organisations across India accelerate IT modernisation,” said Sashikumar Sreedharan, Managing Director, Google Cloud India. This integration is expected to be particularly valuable for enterprises looking to modernise legacy systems while continuing to rely on Oracle databases for core operations.
The service also allows customers to pair Oracle data with Google Cloud services such as BigQuery, Vertex AI and Gemini models, enabling advanced analytics, machine learning and generative AI use cases without duplicating or moving sensitive data. This capability is aimed at industries such as financial services, healthcare, telecom and the public sector, where data governance and performance are critical.
In addition, partners from both Oracle and Google Cloud ecosystems will be able to resell Oracle Database@Google Cloud through the Google Cloud Marketplace, expanding access for enterprises across India. The launch reinforces India’s growing importance as a cloud and AI market, while giving organisations greater flexibility to design multicloud strategies that balance innovation, compliance and operational efficiency.




