Off-Prem

Equinix to pad Thai coffers with $500 million investment

Another Asian country declares ambition to be a tech hub


Thailand has won a pair of high profile investments that boost its ambition to become a hub for datacenters and semiconductor manufacturing.

One of these is a ten-year long 16.5 billion baht ($490 million) commitment from California-headquartered datacenter giant Equinix. The Thailand Board of Investment (BOI) proclaimed the investment will center Thailand as a digital hub for the Greater Mekong Subregion – which includes countries like Cambodia, Laos, Myanmar, Thailand, Vietnam, and parts of China that are connected by the Mekong River.

Equinix has acquired 18,700 square meters of land near Bangkok on which it will build two datacenters, providing capacity for over 3,375 cabinets.

The first phase of the project, worth 7.18 billion baht ($213 million), is slated to be open for service in 2027, according to BOI.

Printed circuit board (PCB)-maker Mektec has also chosen to invest – to the tune of 920 million baht ($27.3 million) – with an eye on developing demand for its electronic devices, especially in electric vehicles.

The investment board boasted that Thailand has become the top source of PCB production in the ASEAN bloc, and scored a top five ranking globally. It also revealed there are currently 47 projects applying for investment promotion, with an estimated collective 173 billion baht ($5.13 billion) value.

Late last week Thailand's prime minister, Paethongtarn Shinawatra, signed into existence a National Semiconductor Board, which he will personal chair. The board, composed of key government and industry leaders, is tasked with making Thailand a top player in semiconductor manufacturing in the region. Shinawatra's involvement signals the government's deep commitment to the goal.

The board's responsibilities include setting industry policies, creating a roadmap for investment and skilled workforce development, and strengthening the supply chain. It will also evaluate plans related to semiconductor development and present them to the cabinet. ®

Send us news
6 Comments

Many people are saying a luxury Dubai property developer will blow $20B on US datacenters

A successful real-estate billionaire and Donald Trump walk into a bar...

AI frenzy continues as Macquarie commits up to $5B for Applied Digital datacenters

Bubble? What bubble?

Looming energy crunch makes future uncertain for datacenters

But investors still betting big on bit barns thanks to AI and cloud demand

With AI boom in full force, 2024 datacenter deals reach $57B record

Fewer giant contracts, but many more smaller ones, in bit barn feeding frenzy

AI datacenters putting zero emissions promises out of reach

Plus: Bit barns' demand for water, land, and power could breed 'growing opposition' from residents

How datacenters use water – and why kicking the habit is nearly impossible

If they're not consuming H2O directly, the power plant almost certainly is

China to probe US chip subsidies as export curbs rattle allies

Beijing investigating claims of unfair competition in mature semiconductors

Amazon splashes $11B on AI datacenters in Georgia

Peach State already home to more than 50 bit barns

AI hype led to an enterprise datacenter spending binge in 2024 that won't last

GPUs and generative AI systems so hot right now... yet 'long-term trend remains,' says analyst

Enterprises in for a shock when they realize power and cooling demands of AI

Energy consumption set to become a key performance indicator by 2027

Biden said to weigh global limits on AI exports in 11th-hour trade war blitz

China faces outright ban while others vie for Uncle Sam's favor

UK unveils plans to mainline AI into the veins of the nation

Government adopts all 50 venture capitalist recommendations but leaves datacenter energy puzzle unsolved