
Amazon CEO Andy Jassy has announced an additional $13 billion investment in India, taking the company’s total planned investment in the country to $48 billion by 2030. The announcement came after Jassy met Prime Minister Narendra Modi in New Delhi during his visit to India on Thursday.
The investment will focus on expanding Amazon’s artificial intelligence (AI), cloud computing, e-commerce and logistics infrastructure. With this latest commitment, Amazon’s cumulative investment in India between 2010 and 2030 is expected to exceed $88 billion, positioning the company among the largest global investors in AI and cloud infrastructure in the country.
Amazon Web Services (AWS) will expand its data centre capacity in Mumbai and Hyderabad, providing startups, enterprises and government organisations with access to advanced AI chips, managed AI services, secure cloud systems and developer tools. The initiative aims to accelerate innovation, scalability and digital transformation across sectors.
The company also plans to strengthen its e-commerce and quick-commerce operations by launching more than 20 fulfilment centres and over 100 new last-mile delivery stations this year.
Amazon stated that it has already digitised 12 million small businesses in India, enabled over $20 billion in cumulative exports, and supported 2.8 million jobs. It has also trained more than 10 million individuals in cloud skills.
In addition, the company has pledged to support millions of jobs, expand export opportunities, extend AI benefits to small businesses, and enhance digital learning initiatives in government schools. Jassy said Amazon’s growth strategy in India aligns with the country’s priorities of AI adoption, digital inclusion, job creation and export expansion.
