Meta and Reliance Industries have announced a major expansion of their strategic partnership with plans to develop an AI-enabled data centre in Jamnagar, Gujarat, marking a significant investment in India's rapidly growing digital and artificial intelligence ecosystem.
Under the agreement, Reliance will build a 168-megawatt (MW) data centre that Meta will lease to support its expanding AI infrastructure and digital services. The facility will serve as Meta's first AI-enabled data centre in India and will include options for future capacity expansion.
Meta said the investment aligns with its global strategy to expand the infrastructure required to support advanced AI technologies and its vision of delivering "personal superintelligence" to users worldwide. India, one of Meta's largest and fastest-growing markets, has emerged as a key destination for the company's long-term technology investments.
The Jamnagar facility will be powered by renewable energy and cooled using desalinated seawater, reflecting a focus on sustainability while supporting energy-intensive AI workloads. Meta will bear the full cost of the energy and water resources required to operate the facility.
"India's rapidly growing digital economy, large user base, and strong partnership with Reliance make the country an ideal location for this investment," Meta said in its announcement.
The project builds on a longstanding relationship between the two companies. In 2020, Meta invested $5.7 billion in Jio Platforms, strengthening digital connectivity and commerce initiatives across India. More recently, the companies have collaborated to bring Meta's open-source AI technologies to Indian enterprises and developers.
Reliance is developing one of the world's largest data centre campuses in Jamnagar, leveraging the region's energy resources and strategic location to support next-generation computing infrastructure. The first phase of the campus will deliver 168 MW of capacity, with plans for future scaling.
Industry observers view the partnership as a significant step in positioning India as a global hub for AI infrastructure. As demand for large-scale computing power continues to surge, investments in data centres are becoming critical to supporting AI model training, deployment and advanced digital services.
The announcement also highlights India's growing importance in the global AI landscape, with multinational technology companies increasingly investing in local infrastructure to meet rising demand for AI-powered applications and services.


