OpenAI is significantly expanding its footprint in India through a new infrastructure partnership with Tata Group. The collaboration will initially secure 100 megawatts of AI-ready data center capacity, with ambitions to scale that figure tenfold to 1 gigawatt over time.
The agreement is part of OpenAI’s broader Stargate initiative, a global effort focused on building advanced AI infrastructure and accelerating enterprise adoption. As part of the deal, OpenAI will become the first major customer of Tata Consultancy Services’ HyperVault data center platform. The initial 100-megawatt allocation marks a substantial investment in compute power, particularly in a field where large-scale AI models demand enormous GPU-driven processing clusters.
Scaling to 1 gigawatt would place the project among the largest AI-dedicated data center deployments worldwide — signaling OpenAI’s long-term commitment to the Indian market.
Beyond infrastructure, the partnership includes a sweeping enterprise rollout. Tata Consultancy Services (TCS) plans to deploy ChatGPT Enterprise across its workforce, potentially reaching hundreds of thousands of employees. The company also intends to standardize AI-native software development practices using OpenAI’s tools, including Codex, across engineering teams.
The collaboration falls under OpenAI’s “OpenAI for India” push, reflecting the country’s importance to the company’s growth strategy. CEO Sam Altman has previously noted that India now accounts for more than 100 million weekly ChatGPT users, spanning students, developers, educators, and entrepreneurs. That scale of adoption has made India one of OpenAI’s most critical international markets.
Hosting advanced AI models within India offers clear advantages. Running compute locally can reduce latency for users while helping businesses meet data localization, compliance, and security requirements — particularly important for regulated industries and government clients. Domestic processing capacity could also unlock new enterprise deals where in-country infrastructure is mandatory.
Financial details of the arrangement have not been disclosed, including whether OpenAI is investing directly in HyperVault or leasing capacity. The HyperVault platform itself is backed by significant funding, including support from private equity firm TPG, with billions earmarked for AI-ready infrastructure development.
OpenAI’s expansion extends beyond data centers. The company plans to open new offices in Mumbai and Bengaluru, adding to its presence in New Delhi. It is also expanding certification programs in India, with TCS becoming the first organization outside the United States to participate.
The announcement coincides with India’s AI Impact Summit in New Delhi, where global technology leaders — including Dario Amodei and Sundar Pichai — are gathering alongside startups and enterprises to discuss AI’s role across industries such as healthcare, finance, and education.
Together, these moves represent OpenAI’s most comprehensive effort yet to anchor large-scale AI infrastructure and enterprise adoption in one of the world’s fastest-growing digital economies.
