June 16, 2026, (Inside AI) — Adani Group and US-based manufacturing giant Jabil Inc are joining forces to build a vertically integrated AI data centre infrastructure platform in India. The alliance aims to produce everything from liquid-cooled AI racks to power distribution units, targeting a global market expected to exceed $3 trillion over seven years.
The partnership combines Jabil’s six decades of engineering and hyperscale data centre expertise with Adani’s vast infrastructure, green energy, and logistics network. The goal is to meet soaring demand for AI-ready hardware, both domestically and for export.
Why This Deal Matters Now
India’s data centre capacity is forecast to hit 5-8 GW by 2030, driven by AI, cloud growth, and data localization laws. Global hyperscalers are pouring over $50 billion into Indian digital infrastructure. This platform positions India as a strategic manufacturing hub at a critical moment.
The alliance will deploy multi-gigawatt high-density AI rack manufacturing capacity. It will produce next-generation liquid-cooled AI racks, servers, storage, and networking systems using advanced Surface Mount Technology and complex box-build processes.
From Racks to Power: A Full-Spectrum Ecosystem
Beyond computing racks, the platform covers white space and grey space devices. This includes power distribution units, coolant distribution units, transformers, switchgears, bus bars, and thermal management systems. The goal is an end-to-end, design-to-deployment hardware ecosystem.
“The platform plans to deploy multi-GW high-density AI Rack manufacturing capacity in India,” Adani said in a statement. This will serve hyperscalers, co-location facilities, and enterprise data centres.
Jabil, with $29.8 billion in fiscal 2025 revenue, brings deep capabilities. Recent acquisitions of Hanley Energy Group and Mikros Technologies bolster its power and thermal solutions. The company has been expanding its US infrastructure to support the AI buildout.
Policy Tailwinds and Data Sovereignty
India’s Digital Personal Data Protection Act and a landmark tax holiday for data centres until 2047 sweeten the deal. These policies boost the competitiveness of India-based manufacturing for global markets. They also align with rising demand for domestically made hardware.
However, some analysts caution that India must address power reliability and skilled labor shortages to fully capitalize. The alliance’s success hinges on execution speed and navigating complex supply chains.
What’s Next for the Adani-Jabil Platform
The joint venture will directly address the needs of global hyperscalers and enterprise data centres. It promises a single-source solution for infrastructure builders, potentially reshaping regional supply chains. The initiative could also spur local component ecosystems and job creation.
As AI compute investments surge, this partnership tests whether India can move beyond assembly to advanced manufacturing. The world will watch how quickly the platform scales to meet the explosive demand.