PDG Breaks Ground on Latest Mumbai Data Center

PDG Breaks Ground on Latest Mumbai Data Center

Data Center Dynamics
Data Center DynamicsApr 10, 2026

Why It Matters

The new Mumbai facility adds significant capacity in a market where demand for cloud and enterprise services is surging, strengthening PDG’s position as a leading colocation provider in South Asia. It also signals continued confidence from global private‑equity and pension investors in India’s digital infrastructure outlook.

Key Takeaways

  • PDG starts building 120 MW MU2 campus on 10 acres in Navi Mumbai.
  • MU2 adds 18,880 sqm (203,220 sq ft) of colocation space.
  • MU1 already provides 50 MW; 100 MW expansion under construction.
  • PDG plans 72 MW Chennai and 90 MW Hyderabad campuses.

Pulse Analysis

India’s data‑center market is entering a rapid expansion phase, driven by escalating cloud adoption, digital transformation initiatives, and stringent data‑localization rules. PDG’s MU2 project, a 120 MW, five‑story campus on a 10‑acre site in Navi Mumbai, directly addresses the capacity gap in the country’s western region. By delivering nearly 203,000 sq ft of colocation space, the facility positions PDG to capture enterprise and hyperscale workloads that previously relied on overseas or over‑subscribed local providers.

The MU2 development builds on PDG’s existing MU1 campus, which already supplies 50 MW and is midway through a 100 MW expansion that will bring the total to five buildings. This layered growth strategy mirrors PDG’s broader South‑Asian rollout, which includes a 72 MW, three‑building campus in Chennai and a newly acquired 90 MW site in Hyderabad. Such a pipeline reflects the firm’s confidence in sustained demand across India’s major metros, where bandwidth consumption and edge‑computing needs are accelerating.

Backed by heavyweight investors—Warburg Pincus, Ontario Teachers’ Pension Plan, Mubadala, and Stonepeak—PDG’s capital‑intensive rollout illustrates the appetite of global capital for Indian digital infrastructure. The infusion of private‑equity and sovereign wealth not only fuels construction but also signals a vote of confidence in the regulatory environment and long‑term revenue prospects. As capacity expands, customers gain more localized options, potentially lowering latency and compliance costs, while the market sees heightened competition that could drive pricing efficiencies and innovation across the Indian data‑center ecosystem.

PDG breaks ground on latest Mumbai data center

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