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Google Launches Its First Cloud Data Centers in India

Google has launched its first cloud region in India, hosted across three Mumbai data centers, each housing a separate cloud availability zone.

Google Launches Its First Cloud Data Centers in India

Delivering on a promise it made at its cloud conference in Mumbai earlier this year, Google has launched its first cloud region in India, hosted across three Mumbai data centers, each housing a separate cloud availability zone.

In launching the Mumbai region, Google is catching up to its biggest public cloud competitors Amazon Web Services and Microsoft Azure, both of whom have had cloud data centers in India for some time.

The region is expected to improve Google Cloud Platform performance for customers in India’s top technology hot-spots of Chennai, Hyderabad, Bangalore, and Mumbai itself. Before the launch, the closest availability region to those customers was hosted in Singapore, a key network interconnection hub from which western tech companies serve markets across Asia Pacific.


Customers in the Indian markets who host applications in the Mumbai region (called asia-south1) instead of Singapore can see latency improvements ranging from 20 to 90 percent, Dave Stiver, product manager for Google Cloud Platform, wrote in a blog post. Another feature Indian customers may find advantageous is the ability to pay for services hosted out of Mumbai in rupees.


Mumbai is Google’s fifth cloud availability region in Asia Pacific. The others, besides Singapore, are in Taiwan, Sydney, and Tokyo. The company now has 13 live cloud regions around the world, compared to Amazon’s 16 and Microsoft’s 36.


The public cloud services market in India will reach $1.8 billion this year, according to a forecast by Gartner, up from $1.3 billion in 2016. The market research firm expects the market to reach $4.1 billion in 2020. Its figures include everything from cloud advertising to cloud infrastructure, application infrastructure, and cloud-based business process services, among other types of offerings.