Storage Warehouses to AI Powerhouses
Gone are the days when data centers were simply places to store information. Today’s facilities in cities such as Mumbai, Chennai, and Bengaluru are evolving into high-velocity engines powering machine learning, real-time analytics, and cloud-native applications. It’s a fundamental reimagining of what these facilities can do.
But modern GPUs and high-performance processors in dense racks require targeted cooling – traditional air cooling simply can’t keep up with these high rack densities. Enter liquid cooling and other advanced thermal management solutions. Add India’s sweltering ambient temperatures, unpredictable power grids, and rising energy costs to the mix, and you’ve got a complex puzzle that demands smart, adaptive infrastructure design.
Balancing Po
wer Demands with Environmental Responsibility
AI workloads are energy-hungry beasts. Without thoughtful planning, they can overwhelm local power grids and send operational costs soaring. The solution? A holistic approach combining energy-efficient power systems, scalable cooling, and intelligent controls that adapt to workload changes in real-time.
Bringing Compute Closer to Home
While massive hyperscale campuses grab headlines, there’s another revolution happening at the edges. As AI, 5G, and IoT converge, industries from manufacturing to healthcare need computing power right where data is generated. Waiting for information to travel to distant data centers and back simply won’t cut it for latency-sensitive applications.
This distributed approach does double duty: it delivers fast processing while keeping sensitive data within India’s borders—a win for both performance and data sovereignty. It’s about strengthening security and maintaining control over critical national digital assets.
N
avigating the Roadblocks
Despite attracting over USD 10 billion in annual investment, India’s data center boom faces real challenges:
- Supply chain vulnerabilities: Heavy reliance on imported semiconductors and cooling tech makes projects susceptible to global disruptions. Building local manufacturing capabilities is crucial.
- The talent crunch: As facilities grow more sophisticated, there’s a pressing need for professionals who understand AI-optimized infrastructure. Industry, universities, and training centers need to work together to build this workforce.
- Managing complexity: Manual oversight becomes impractical as operations scale. AI-driven monitoring, automation, and predictive maintenance aren’t luxuries—they’re necessities for keeping these complex systems running smoothly.
The potential here is enormous. By embracing adaptable, modular, and efficient infrastructure designs, India can claim its spot as a global leader in next-generation data centers. These facilities will become the backbone of the digital economy, powering everything from e-commerce and fintech to autonomous systems and smart agriculture.
The key is a mindset shift: stop thinking of data centers as static buildings and start seeing them as dynamic, intelligent platforms that enable innovation. The choices made today—about design, technology, sustainability, and people—will determine whether India successfully harnesses AI for broad-based, lasting growth.
The foundation is being laid right now. What’s built today will define India’s digital tomorrow.
The author is Sanjay Kr Sainani, Global Senior Vice President, Vertiv.
Disclaimer: The views expressed are solely of the author and ETCIO does not necessarily subscribe to it. ETCIO shall not be responsible for any damage caused to any person/organization directly or indirectly.






