Table of Contents Show
The intersection of global technology ambition and India’s rapidly evolving digital infrastructure has produced yet another landmark development. Uber, a ride hailing giant, has announced a strategic partnership with the Adani Group to establish its first data centre in India. The announcement, made by Uber CEO Dara Khosrowshahi following a meeting with Gautam Adani in Ahmedabad, signals a significant deepening of Uber’s long term commitment to India as a technology and innovation powerhouse.
A Strategic Move Rooted in Vision
India has steadily emerged as one of the most dynamic markets for global technology companies, offering a vast talent pool, a rapidly expanding digital economy, and a government actively encouraging localised data storage and digital infrastructure. It is within this context that Uber’s decision to establish local data infrastructure carries substantial strategic weight. The forthcoming facility, expected to become operational later this year, will not merely serve Uber’s domestic operations — it will support the company’s global technology ambitions, with Khosrowshahi articulating a vision of building transformative solutions “from India, for the world.”
India at the Centre of Uber’s Growth Narrative
Khosrowshahi’s five day visit to India was marked by a series of high profile engagements, including meetings with Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman and former NITI Aayog CEO and G20 Sherpa Amitabh Kant. These interactions reflect the seriousness with which Uber views the Indian market. Notably, Khosrowshahi revealed that the number of earners on Uber’s platform in India has quadrupled since his previous meeting with the Finance Minister in 2022 — a testament to the platform’s deepening integration into India’s gig economy and urban mobility landscape.
A Broader Wave of Technology Investment
Uber’s partnership with the Adani Group is not an isolated development. It forms part of a broader surge in technology and AI infrastructure investment in India. Amazon has committed USD 12.7 billion towards cloud infrastructure in the country by 2030. OpenAI has signed on as the first customer for TCS’s new AI data centre business, which is starting with 100MW of capacity. Meanwhile, Google is reportedly seriously considering manufacturing AI servers domestically. Collectively, these investments underscore India’s emergence as a preferred destination for large-scale digital infrastructure.
AdaniConneX: Growing Presence in India’s Data Sector
The partnership further strengthens AdaniConneX, the Adani Group’s digital infrastructure venture, which has a growing presence in India’s AI and data centre sector. With projects that include a large AI-focused data centre campus in Visakhapatnam, developed in collaboration with Google and Bharti Airtel, AdaniConneX is steadily expanding its role in India’s digital landscape.
Conclusion
The Uber–Adani partnership represents more than a corporate agreement — it reflects the convergence of global technological ambition and India’s aspirations under the Viksit Bharat 2047 vision. As leading technology companies continue to invest in India’s digital infrastructure, the country’s standing as a leading innovation hub continues to gain momentum on the global stage.