Equinix will invest more than USD 190 million to develop a new data centre facility in Kuala Lumpur, expanding its presence in Malaysia with what will become its fourth operational facility in the country, the company announced in the past week.
The US-listed data centre operator stated that the new facility will be constructed less than one kilometre from its existing Kuala Lumpur campus. The development is expected to accommodate more than 2,200 cabinets and will be designed to support growing enterprise and cloud infrastructure requirements across Southeast Asia.
According to the company, a substantial portion of the new facility’s total capacity will be dedicated to advanced liquid cooling technologies intended to support artificial intelligence applications and high-performance computing workloads. Demand for AI-ready infrastructure has accelerated globally over the past year, driving higher investment in specialised cooling systems and power-intensive data centre environments.
Equinix stated that the project forms part of its long-term expansion strategy in Malaysia and broader ASEAN markets. The company indicated that future growth opportunities would be supported through adjacent land parcels already secured for additional expansion near the Kuala Lumpur site.
The company further stated that the investment reinforces Kuala Lumpur’s position as an important interconnection hub within the ASEAN region, where demand for cloud services, digital infrastructure and enterprise connectivity continues to increase.
The latest investment comes amid a moderation in the rapid growth previously witnessed in Malaysia’s data centre sector. Industry participants and policymakers have increasingly raised concerns regarding pressure on electricity grids and water resources resulting from the surge in hyperscale and AI-driven data centre developments across the country.
Malaysia has emerged as a significant destination for global data centre operators in recent years due to relatively competitive land costs, connectivity infrastructure and proximity to major Asian digital markets. Kuala Lumpur and Johor, in particular, have attracted substantial investments from international technology and infrastructure companies.
At the same time, the sector has also come under geopolitical scrutiny. Washington has reportedly increased pressure on Southeast Asian countries to prevent Chinese companies from using regional markets as indirect channels to access advanced US-manufactured artificial intelligence chips that are subject to export controls.
Equinix is among the world’s largest data centre operators, with facilities spanning multiple global markets across the Americas, Europe, Asia-Pacific, the Middle East and Africa. The company continues to expand its Asia-Pacific footprint as demand for cloud computing, AI infrastructure and digital connectivity rises across the region.