IBM, a leading
technology company on Tuesday launched public data centre in Chennai to tap
into growing demand from financial services and government sectors. The move is also likely to help IBM tap into the government initiatives like Smart Cities and
Digital India.
Part of the company’s global investment of
$1.2 billion, it is IBM’s second such centre in India. The first one in Mumbai
offers private cloud computing services. Its cloud clients include Tata Sky,
Bharat Light and Power, Janalakshmi Financial Services and Mankind Pharma.
"We are looking at setting up another public cloud data centre. As
you know, sectors like government and financial services prefer their data
residing within the country," said Vanitha Narayanan, IBM India Managing Director.
“With a local onramp to IBM Cloud, Indian
customers, especially those in regulated industries, gain more flexibility to
store and compute data within the country,” said Robert LeBlanc, IBM Cloud
senior vice president told media.
This is IBM’s 42nd data centre in its
expansive network, providing users with performance and disaster recovery to
ensure business continuity, he added.
He, however, did not disclose details about
specific investments on the centre and the size of the centre.
IBM has cloud centres in cities such as
London, Beijing, Melbourne, Toronto and Dallas.
The centre will help IBM tap into government
initiatives like ‘Digital India’ and ‘Smart Cities’ It will also enable the
company to tap into data sensitive sectors like banking, financial services and
telecom that often mandate that data be hosted in local data centres.
Earlier this year, Microsoft had also
announced setting up of three local data centres in India to tap into what it
believes is a $2 trillion cloud opportunity.
“India’s cloud market is poised for
exponential growth. The Chennai data centre will support India’s growing
customer demand for in-country cloud solutions with faster network speeds,”
LeBlanc said.
IBM has also partnered IT industry body
Nasscom for the latter’s 10,000 start-ups initiative.
“In an effort to accelerate digital
transformation both at the enterprise and start-up level, IBM is establishing a
partnership with Nasscom to launch Techstartup.in, a digital hub wherein the
entire Indian start-up ecosystem, including angels, mentors, investors,
academia and venture capitalists, can interact with each other to grow the
cloud market,”, said Sandy Carter, IBM GM, Cloud Ecosystem and Developers.
Highlighting the role that the Chennai data
centre can play for start-ups, LeBlanc said developers and start-ups are an
integral part of India’s ecosystem and key to Digital India initiative.
A study suggests that by 2018, India will have
5.2 million developers, surpassing the US, he said.
“This growth will only increase as thousands
of start-ups are expected to establish themselves in India, generating
employment opportunities. This will not only pave the way for innovative
services, but will also act as a major booster for the development of the
Indian economy,” he added.
IBM has also launched two initiatives - Works
Premium and a cloud certification programme - to enable developers with tools
and skills to compete and innovate in the global marketplace.
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