OpenAI’s Tata Tie-Up Puts 100 MW of AI Compute on the Table in India
OpenAI’s India push just got a serious power upgrade.
In a new partnership with the Tata Group, OpenAI will anchor Tata Consultancy Services’ (TCS) HyperVault data center platform with 100 MW of AI-ready capacity, with an option to scale to 1 gigawatt over time, as reported by TechCrunch and the Times of India.
OpenAI’s pitch is simple: bring more compute closer to one of its largest user bases while meeting enterprise requirements for data residency, security, and compliance.
A compute deal with a workforce rollout attached
This isn’t just a capacity reservation. The Tata Group also plans to roll out ChatGPT Enterprise internally, beginning with hundreds of thousands of TCS employees, according to TechCrunch. TCS is also expected to standardize AI-assisted software development using OpenAI’s Codex tools, a notable move for an IT services giant whose business depends on how quickly it can modernize delivery.
Demand is the other tailwind. OpenAI CEO Sam Altman recently estimated that more than 100 million weekly ChatGPT users are in India, according to TechCrunch. Locating more inference capacity in-country can reduce latency for users, but it’s also a door-opener for regulated industries and public-sector workloads that prefer, or require, local processing.
HyperVault’s moment, and India’s broader infrastructure race
HyperVault has been building toward gigawatt-scale ambitions for months. In a November 2025 TCS press release, the company said it secured $1 billion from TPG to accelerate HyperVault’s AI data center buildout. That context matters: the OpenAI tie-up reads like the first big proof point that HyperVault can land marquee customers at scale.
The deal also fits a wider shift across the industry: AI leaders are treating power and physical capacity as strategic constraints, not background plumbing. OpenAI has been blunt about that reality in its own infrastructure push, including its Stargate AI infrastructure plans and the broader debate over AI data center spending. India is seeing similar momentum, with hyperscalers expanding local capacity as part of Google’s India AI buildout.
For OpenAI, the headline number is 100 MW. The bigger story is what it signals: India is no longer just a growth market for AI tools. It’s becoming a place where frontier-scale compute gets built.
Also read: The power-and-location scramble is already visible at gigawatt scale in Meta’s $10B Indiana data center.
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