New Delhi, Nov. 26 -- Larsen & Turbo has rebranded its data centre business as Larsen & Turbo-Vymoa. The business was launched in 2024 as L&T-Cloudfiniti. Vyoma integrates advanced AI capabilities, cloud-native architectures, and low-carbon operations to enable businesses to operate in a connected world.

"As India's data centre market is projected to grow exponentially over the next few years, Larsen & Toubro-Vyoma embodies our vision to build a trusted ecosystem that supports the nation's digital ambition. By integrating sovereign capabilities, AI-readiness, and sustainable operations, we aim to enable bold innovation and secure growth," said S N Subrahmanyan, Chairman & Managing Director, L&T.

The company said that Vyoma combines scale, sovereignty, AI-readiness, and sustainability. It will spearhead L&T's expansion into hyperscale data centres across key Indian metros, including Mumbai, Chennai and Bengaluru, with facilities designed to support high-performance computing and advanced data storage requirements.

The last few weeks have been significant for the data centre industry in the country. On November 20, Tata Consultancy Services (TCS) announced a partnership with global investment firm TPG, which will invest up to $1 billion to support the expansion of TCS' AI-focused data center business, HyperVault. The partnership is aimed at accelerating the development of large-scale AI-ready data centers in India as demand for computing capacity increases across sectors.

Prior to that, Adani Enterprises Ltd, through its joint venture AdaniConneX, announced a partnership with Google to develop India's largest artificial intelligence (AI) data centre campus in Visakhapatnam. According to Adani Enterprises, Google's AI hub in Visakhapatnam represents an investment of about $15 billion (Rs.1.25 lakh crore) over five years, between 2026 and 2030. In a parallel development, Sify Technologies has begun work on a Rs.1,500-crore AI Edge Data Center and Open Cable Landing Station (CLS) in Visakhapatnam.

Published by HT Digital Content Services with permission from TechCircle.