CtrlS Datacenters Limited, Asia's Largest Rated-4 Datacenter Provider, intends to explore various potential markets in Southeast Asia and the Middle East in order to construct a connected future that would benefit enterprise customers and hyperscalers worldwide.
According to a press statement, the company is actively exploring prospects in Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Bangladesh, Thailand, Malaysia, and Vietnam to assist its key technology customers in scaling with ease and creating synergies and efficiencies.
CtrlS Datacenters Limited, which began operations in 2007, now operates more than one million square feet of datacenter space in India, spanning over eight datacenters in key technology hubs such as Mumbai, Delhi-NCR, Bangalore, and Hyderabad.
The company already has a presence in several of these markets through its group company, Cloud4C, enabling agility while leveraging local focus and allowing it to adapt faster to local consumer needs and dynamic market demands.
Sridhar Pinnapureddy, Chairman of CtrlS Datacenters Limited, elaborated on the company's worldwide expansion strategy. "With data explosion, datacenters are at the hub of the digital transformation," he remarked. We will enter these markets gradually and may form strategic alliances with local partners when appropriate."
We intend to build world-class datacenter assets in India and around the world. Our global datacenters will have capacities ranging from 10 MW to 50 MW, he noted.
CtrlS President & Chief Business Officer Royce Thomas, said, “ Southeast Asia and Middle East have emerged as our priority markets as digitalization is at its peak here. Several enterprises in these markets have drawn up their digital transformation roadmap, and CtrlS will enable them in their path.”
Research shows that the global DC market will grow over five percent CAGR between 2021 and 2030 taking the market size from $220 billion to over $340 billion, driven by exponential increase in data and initiatives taken by governments to promote digital economy, connectivity and infrastructure.