By Abhirami G
July 2 (Reuters) – A consortium including Microsoft and telecom startup Lightstorm plans to build a new undersea cable linking India āwith Malaysia and Singapore as technology firms compete to expand AI āand cloud infrastructure in India, one of the world’s fastest-growing data markets.
The consortium, whose other āmembers include Tata Communications, Singapore Telecommunications, Singapore’s ASEAN Cableship and Japan’s NEC Corporation, will construct the I-2SEA cable to support AI, cloud and hyperscale workloads, the companies said on Thursday.
They did not provide additional details including the investment size.
The ānetwork will span 3,600 km ā and have landing stations in Machilipatnam in the southern Indian state of Andhra Pradesh, where Meta and Alphabet have ā announced data centers.
The cable is expected to be operational in the fourth quarter of 2029, Lightstorm Group CEO and Managing Director Amajit Gupta told Reuters in āan interview.
The āI Squared-backed company currently connects 19 āAI and cloud zones across āIndia through terrestrial fiber cable networks, with the new network expected to bring this number up to 29, Gupta said.
India’s operational data center capacity could double from the current 1.4 gigawatts by 2027, based on projects under construction, and increase five-fold by 2030 if planned projects are fast-tracked, Macquarie Equity āResearch said in a report last October.
Undersea ācables carry roughly 95% of the world’s internet ātraffic. India currently has 17 āactive submarine cables with a maximum potential capacity of ā960 terabits per second, and at āleast 10 more have ābeen publicly announced, according to TeleGeography, a telecommunications research firm.
Separately, Lightstorm plans to list in India in mid-2027, Gupta said, without disclosing āany other details. The ācompany was seeking a valuation of up to $1.5 billion in March, āaccording to a media report.
(Reporting by Abhirami G in Bengaluru; editing āby Chandini Monnappa and Sonia Cheema)
