According to www.eetindia.co.in, India has broken ground on a $15 billion Google Cloud India AI Hub in Visakhapatnam, Andhra Pradesh, as part of a national strategy to embed itself in the global electronics supply chain and AI infrastructure ecosystem.
Project Scale and Infrastructure Commitments
The hub centers on a 1 GW hyperscale AI data center, developed jointly by Adani ConneX and Airtel Nxtra. Approximately 600 acres of land have been allocated across three locations in Visakhapatnam district: Turluvada, Rambilli, and Adavivaram. The facility will be powered by dedicated high-capacity grid infrastructure and is designed to support compute-intensive AI workloads for domestic and international clients. Google has also deployed three subsea cables originating from Visakhapatnam, connecting India to Australia, the Middle East, Europe, Africa, and the United States — establishing the city as a physical node in global digital transit networks.
Government Strategy and Domestic Manufacturing Metrics
Union Minister for Electronics & Information Technology, Railways and Information & Broadcasting, Shri Ashwini Vaishnaw, stated at the May 4, 2026 groundbreaking ceremony that India now meets nearly 50% of its domestic electronics demand through local production. He cited mobile phones as among India’s top export categories — a shift accelerated by the Production-Linked Incentive (PLI) Scheme for IT Hardware and Large-Scale Electronics Manufacturing. Under the India Semiconductor Mission, commercial semiconductor production has already commenced, with fabrication facilities operational as of early 2026. Vaishnaw emphasized the Prime Minister’s vision for India to become a global hub in semiconductors, quantum technologies, space, and artificial intelligence by 2047.
Executive Statements and Strategic Alignment
“The AI Hub will serve as a foundation for Viksit Bharat 2047” — Bikash Koley, Vice President, Google Cloud Global Infrastructure
“[The 1 GW hyperscale AI data center] marks a major milestone in India’s AI journey” — Jeet Adani, Chairman, Adani Group
Vaishnaw described the project as “transformative” and projected Visakhapatnam’s evolution into “AI Patnam (AI City)”, a designation reflecting its planned integration of AI infrastructure, talent development, and sectoral application — particularly in education, healthcare, aerospace, logistics, and agriculture. The event drew participation from Andhra Pradesh Chief Minister Shri N. Chandrababu Naidu, Union and State ministers, Members of Parliament, and executives from Google, Adani Group, and Airtel Nxtra.
Supply Chain Implications for Industry Practitioners
For supply chain professionals, the hub signals concrete shifts in regional risk diversification and hardware sourcing logic. India’s local electronics manufacturing share rose from 18% in FY2019 to 49% in FY2025, per Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology (MeitY) annual reports. The $15 billion investment exceeds the total foreign direct investment (FDI) inflows into India’s electronics hardware sector between 2014 and 2023 ($12.4 billion), according to DPIIT data. With server, GPU, and chip assembly now explicitly invited for local manufacturing — as urged by Vaishnaw — procurement teams must assess new Tier-2 and Tier-3 supplier certifications in Andhra Pradesh’s Electronics Manufacturing Clusters (EMCs). The Visakhapatnam hub also enables low-latency AI model training for logistics optimization tools used by Indian and multinational freight forwarders operating across the Bay of Bengal corridor.
Source: www.eetindia.co.in
Compiled from international media by the SCI.AI editorial team.










