India’s Bharti Airtel has pulled off one of the biggest digital infrastructure deals as it raised $1 billion for its data center arm, Nxtra.
The funding comes at a time when India is emerging as a serious market for AI, cloud computing and enterprise digital infrastructure.
In an exchange filing, Airtel said Alpha Wave Global will invest $435 million, Carlyle $240 million and Anchorage Capital $35 million, with the company contributing the balance while retaining control of Nxtra.
The deal values Nxtra at about $3.1 billion after closing and still needs regulatory approvals in India.
Fresh capital, but Airtel is keeping control
What stands out first is the structure of the deal.
Airtel is not cashing out of Nxtra. It is bringing in new capital and heavyweight investors, while making sure the business remains firmly within the group’s long-term strategic fold.
Airtel said its wholly owned subsidiary currently holds 75.96% of Nxtra and will continue to retain control after the transaction.
That is an important signal as it suggests Airtel sees data centers not as a non-core asset to monetize, but as a business it wants to scale aggressively.
The proceeds are meant to fund growth, not repair the balance sheet.
Airtel said Nxtra will use the money to expand capacity across India and broaden its offerings for enterprises, hyperscalers and government customers.
In simple terms, that means more campuses, more power capacity and a wider range of services for the clients, driving India’s digital buildout.
Why Nxtra sits close to India’s AI and cloud boom
Nxtra already has a sizable footprint.
Airtel said the company operates 14 large core data centers and more than 120 edge facilities across India.
It currently has around 300 megawatts of capacity and is aiming to scale to 1 gigawatt over the next few years, with a target of roughly 25% market share.
Those numbers show why the unit matters inside Airtel, as it gives the telecom group a way to plug directly into one of the fastest-growing parts of the digital economy.
The wider market is moving in the same direction.
Airtel cited Savills India estimates showing the country’s data center market could grow at about 21% a year between 2024 and 2030, reaching nearly 3,400 MW of IT capacity by the end of the decade.
India’s next infrastructure race is already underway
The investor lineup also says something about where capital thinks India is headed.
Alpha Wave is leading the round, Carlyle is increasing its exposure as an existing investor, and Airtel itself is putting in fresh money.
Together, these points point to a growing conviction that India’s data center market is becoming a long-duration infrastructure opportunity.
Airtel has also tried to make Nxtra’s next phase sound more future-facing.
The company said Nxtra is building AI-ready campuses in Chennai, Mumbai and Kolkata.
Nxtra fundraise also has a broader context as Google plans to invest $15 billion over five years in a large AI data center project in India with Adani Group and Airtel as partners.
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