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Amazon Web Services Announces $9 Billion Cloud Investment in Singapore

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ASEAN Beat | Economy | Southeast Asia

Amazon Web Services Announces $9 Billion Cloud Investment in Singapore

The investment will augment Amazon’s cloud infrastructure in Singapore, and reinforce the city-state’s status as one of the world’s major data hubs.

Amazon Web Services Announces $9 Billion Cloud Investment in Singapore
Credit: Depositphotos

Amazon’s cloud computing unit announced yesterday that it will invest SG$12 billion (around $9 billion) in expanding its cloud infrastructure in Singapore, following large investment pledges from rival U.S. tech giants.

In a statement, Amazon Web Services (AWS) said that the investment will support the construction, operation, and maintenance of data centers up to 2028 “to meet growing customer demand for cloud technology and services in the country.”

Priscilla Chong, the Singapore country manager for AWS, said that investment would “help reinforce Singapore’s status as an attractive regional innovation launchpad, and a global leader in digital competitiveness.” She added, “This investment will create a ripple effect across Singapore by increasing economic growth and cloud adoption.”

The company also made a separate announcement of an artificial intelligence (AI) program that will train 5,000 people annually over the next three years in partnership with the Singapore government.

The new Amazon investment will significantly augment AWS’ cloud infrastructure in Singapore, and reinforce the city-state’s status as one of the world’s major data hubs. A low corporate tax rate, established network infrastructure, and fast and reliable connectivity have prompted leading cloud players like AWS, Microsoft Azure, IBM Softlayer, and Google Cloud to set up operations in Singapore, which now boasts 99 data centers, according to Cloudscene.

AWS built its first Asian data center in Singapore in 2010, and up until 2023, claims to have invested SG$11.5 billion ($8.48 billion) in its Singapore-based Asia-Pacific operations. This has created the infrastructure for the digital services provided by a wide variety of local firms, including the tech firm Grab, the insurance company Singlife, and various government entities, including the Maritime & Port Authority of Singapore. In March of last year, AWS announced that it would invest $6 billion in Malaysia by 2037. In 2022, the company announced $5 billion in investments in both Thailand and Indonesia.

The AWS announcement came just a week after Microsoft announced a multibillion-dollar investment in Southeast Asia. During a three-nation tour of the region last week, CEO Satya Nadella announced the firm would invest $1.7 billion in Indonesia and $2.2 billion in Malaysia to expand the company’s cloud and AI infrastructure.  Nadella said that the company also planned to build a data center in Thailand, and to “equip 2.5 million people in the member states of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) with AI skills by 2025,” in partnership with the governments of Indonesia, Malaysia, the Philippines, Thailand, and Vietnam.

Apple’s chief executive Tim Cook also visited the region recently, announcing a $250 million expansion of the company’s headquarters in Singapore and flagging possible future manufacturing investments in Vietnam and Indonesia.

Taken together, this flurry of attention from the major U.S. tech firms, while not evenly distributed throughout the region, amounts to a vote of confidence in Southeast Asia’s economic potential.  As I noted last week of the Microsoft investments, the fast-growing region, which boasts a  young and tech-savvy population of more than 690 million, is “increasingly important as both a market and manufacturing base, especially for U.S. firms seeking to reduce their dependence on Chinese supply chains.”

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