Business Standard

Covid-19 pushes up demand for data centres

- SAI ISHWAR

Digital adoption, triggered by the Covid-19 and the regulatory requiremen­ts for multinatio­nal companies to store and process user data within the countr y ’s borders, has resulted in a huge demand for data centres.

“The pandemic has been a massive catalyst for digital adoption,” said Shobhit Agarwal, managing director and chief executive officer of property consultant Anarock Capital. “Work-from-home compulsion­s, online education, video-based medical consultati­ons, a huge increase in e-commerce, and business-related videoconfe­rencing and webinars are increasing the demand for data centres. Furthermor­e, the government’s move to make data localisati­on mandatory ensures a promising future for data centres.”

According to Anarock’s report, data centres in the top eight cities such as Mumbai, Chennai, Bengaluru, and Hyderabad occupy 7.5 million square feet of space and an additional 10 million square feet is likely to be added over the next two-three years. Immediatel­y after India imposed a lockdown, there was a 25-35 per cent increase in data centre capacity usage as companies began to overhaul their digital infrastruc­ture, the consultant observed.

“Data storage in India has grown eight times to 2.8 zettabytes since 2014, driven by rapid adoption of Cloud, growth in digital transactio­ns and e-commerce,” said B S Rao, vice-president (market

ing), Ctrls. “Once the proposed Personal Data Protection Bill, 2019, is enacted, all multinatio­nals operating in India will have to localise data. This will be a key growth driver for Indian data centres, besides emerging technologi­es, such as the internet of things (IOT),

5G, and Big Data.”

According to industry estimates, the data centre outsourcin­g market in India is worth over $2 billion and is projected to grow at a compound annual growth rate of 25 per cent to reach $5 billion by 2023-24.

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