Visakhapatnam: Google has broken ground on what it is billing as India’s largest-ever technology infrastructure project: a gigawatt-scale artificial intelligence hub in Visakhapatnam, Andhra Pradesh, built in partnership with AdaniConneX and Nxtra by Airtel. The ceremony at Tarluvada on 28th April marked the start of construction on a three-campus data centre complex that sits at the heart of a $15 billion investment Google has committed to deploying across India between 2026 and 2030.
The numbers are staggering by any measure. Nearly 1 gigawatt of compute capacity at a single location, three data centre campuses, a fibre-optic expansion under the America-India Connect initiative, and a long-term clean energy strategy designed to feed new renewable supply into the national grid. Google says the project will help India hit its target of 500 gigawatts of non-fossil fuel capacity by 2030 while delivering the high-performance, low-latency infrastructure that businesses need to build and scale AI-powered services.
The groundbreaking drew a formidable gathering of political and corporate India. Union minister for information technology Ashwini Vaishnaw, Andhra Pradesh chief minister N. Chandrababu Naidu and state IT minister Nara Lokesh attended alongside Google Cloud chief executive Thomas Kurian, Adani Group directors Karan Adani and Jeet Adani, and Bharti Enterprises vice chairman Rakesh Mittal.
Vaishnaw framed the project in terms of national ambition. “The India AI hub and three subsea cables landing in Visakhapatnam will become very important infrastructure for the country’s journey forward,” he said, adding his thanks to Google for its “continued trust in India.” Naidu was equally bullish, describing Andhra Pradesh as “India’s premier investment destination” and the Vizag hub as a cornerstone of the state’s technology corridor. “Our vision goes beyond attracting investment,” he said. “We want local talent, startups, and enterprises to become active partners in this technology-driven growth story.”
Kurian called the groundbreaking “a powerful realization of our shared vision with the Indian government, and an inflection point for the country’s AI-native future.” Jeet Adani put it more bluntly: “When energy becomes more affordable and increasingly powered by clean sources, intelligence becomes more accessible — and that is how India will lead the next phase of digital growth.” Gopal Vittal, executive vice chairman of Bharti Airtel, said the full stack of data centres, green power, pan-India fibre and a next-generation cable landing station would enable “large-scale, world-class AI infrastructure in Vizag.”
The project was first announced in October 2025. AdaniConneX and Nxtra by Airtel will lead construction of the data centre buildings and connecting infrastructure, with Google deploying its AI capabilities on top.
Beyond the infrastructure, Google has announced a raft of community programmes designed to address what it acknowledges are real social and environmental pressures around the campus sites. On water, it is partnering with Sponge Collaborative to launch a watershed management plan that links coastal ecosystem restoration with clean drinking water systems, including reverse osmosis plants and Water ATMs, for local communities. On livelihoods, a tie-up with the Sambhav Foundation will equip more than 1,000 fisherfolk with GPS navigation, weather-forecasting applications, cold-chain management training and UPI-based financial literacy. The Google Udaan India Fund, run through ChangeX, will provide direct grants to local schools and social enterprises for AI skilling labs and digital literacy programmes. A separate initiative with the Learning Links Foundation, the NARI Shakti programme, will support more than 10,000 women entrepreneurs from low-income backgrounds in building micro-enterprises. And the Skills Trade and Readiness programme will prepare more than 1,000 local workers for construction, welding and facility operations roles while a parallel tie-up with ICT Academy will train 1,200-plus students and educators in cloud computing and generative AI.
The groundbreaking was accompanied by the Bharat AI Shakti Conclave, a conference organised with the Andhra Pradesh government and minister Nara Lokesh, bringing together suppliers, industry partners and infrastructure firms to map how Google’s anchor investment can generate a wider economic value chain for the region. The conclave’s explicit theme was building an AI industrial corridor, with a local-first procurement approach and the integration of regional small and medium enterprises into Google’s global operational frameworks.
India has been courted by every major technology company in the world. What makes Vizag different is the sheer scale of the commitment and the deliberate attempt to build an industrial ecosystem around it rather than simply plant servers in a field. Google is not just betting on India’s digital future — it is trying to build the factory floor on which that future gets made. Whether the $15 billion translates into genuine local opportunity, or simply into an impressive data centre that hums quietly on the coast of Andhra Pradesh, will depend on whether those community programmes prove as durable as the hardware. The groundbreaking is the easy part.
