Australia’s AirTrunk to invest US$3 billion in two new Malaysian data centres
The company has also said that it plans to spend US$5 billion in India
[SYDNEY] Australia’s AirTrunk said on Thursday (Apr 30) that it will invest US$3 billion to build two hyperscale data centres in Malaysia, doubling its existing business in the country.
The two data centres, to be located in Johor Bahru, will have a combined capacity of more than 280 megawatts and be situated close to AirTrunk’s existing data centre campuses.
The four data centres will have more than 700 megawatts of capacity and bring the value of AirTrunk’s investment in Malaysia to US$6.8 billion, the company said.
“Demand for cloud and AI infrastructure across Asia-Pacific is moving faster than most people expected,” said Robin Khuda, AirTrunk’s chief executive. “Our job is to stay ahead of that, not just in one market, but across the region.”
The Malaysian expansion comes after AirTrunk, which is owned by a Blackstone-led consortium, said last week that it would buy Indian data centre developer Lumina CloudInfra, to increase its business in India. AirTrunk has said that it plans to spend US$5 billion in India.
AirTrunk will have more than 3GW of operating and planned capacity, across 20 data centres in six regions once the Indian deal is complete, the company said.
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The Australian-founded firm was bought by the consortium in 2024 for A$24 billion (S$22 billion), the largest deal of its type at the time. REUTERS
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