The development comes at a time when demand for AI-ready data centres is rising sharply in India. Instead of relying only on overseas infrastructure, technology firms are increasing local data processing capabilities to improve speed, reduce operational delays and support growing AI workloads.
For Uber, India is already one of its biggest technology markets outside the US, with Bengaluru playing a major role in engineering, mobility systems and backend development.
The announcement also strengthens Adani Group’s push into digital infrastructure. Earlier this year, the group said it plans to invest $100 billion in renewable-energy-powered, AI-ready data centres by 2035 through Adani Connex.
Uber’s entry into India’s data centre ecosystem places it among companies increasing investments in cloud and AI infrastructure as competition intensifies in one of the world’s fastest-growing digital markets.
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