Google’s parent company Alphabet (NASDAQ: GOOGL) saw its shares slip marginally in early trading after reports emerged that India is actively pushing the tech giant to localize parts of its artificial intelligence infrastructure buildout. The move comes as New Delhi intensifies efforts to strengthen domestic high-performance computing capabilities and attract global hyperscalers into deeper hardware commitments.
India’s IT leadership has reportedly urged Google to consider manufacturing AI servers locally as part of a broader push tied to its expanding AI and data infrastructure ambitions. While the stock reaction remained muted, investors are closely watching how these developments could reshape long-term capital spending plans across Asia’s fastest-growing digital economy.
The discussion is unfolding alongside Google’s reported plans for a major AI infrastructure hub in Visakhapatnam, valued at approximately $15 billion. The project is expected to become one of the company’s largest data center and AI compute investments in the region.
Alphabet Inc., GOOGL
Early projections suggest the facility could scale up to 5 gigawatts of capacity, positioning it as a key backbone for cloud computing and AI workloads across South Asia. The sheer scale of the investment signals India’s rising importance in global AI infrastructure, especially as demand for compute power accelerates worldwide.
Market analysts say such large-scale commitments often lead to short-term uncertainty for investors due to rising capital expenditure, even if long-term revenue potential remains strong.
A central part of India’s proposal is encouraging Google to move beyond just data center expansion and into local manufacturing of AI servers, chips, and related hardware components.
Google already designs its own Tensor Processing Units (TPUs) but currently depends on global partners such as Quanta and Foxconn for server assembly. High-level integration and chip testing, however, remain concentrated in the United States.
Indian policymakers argue that local production would strengthen the country’s electronics ecosystem, reduce dependency on imports, and support value-added manufacturing instead of simple assembly. Officials also highlighted that companies like HP have already begun limited AI server production in India, signaling early momentum in the sector.
India is also revising its Production Linked Incentive (PLI 2.0) framework for IT hardware to better align with AI-era manufacturing realities. The current structure rewards output and turnover, but it is considered less effective for AI systems where GPUs can account for up to 90% of total hardware costs.
The updated approach aims to reward value creation rather than volume, particularly in advanced components such as GPUs and server-grade chips, segments still largely manufactured outside India.
If implemented successfully, the policy shift could encourage deeper participation from global tech firms like Google, while simultaneously strengthening India’s ambition to become a global AI hardware hub.
For now, investors seem to be adopting a wait-and-see approach as Google balances global supply chains, geopolitical priorities, and the accelerating demand for AI computing power
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