A new data center firm has launched with plans to develop data center campuses in Thailand.

Doma Infrastructure Group (DIG), which describes itself as a developer of master-planned data center parks, partnered with Silicon Tech Park (STP), a Thai technology park operator to jointly develop three AI-ready green data center parks in the Eastern Economic Corridor (EEC).

Doma
– Doma

The joint venture is set to acquire 300 acres of freehold land across Chachoengsao, Chonburi, and Rayong provinces, with a total planned power capacity of 1.5GW.

The core and shell facilities will cater to data center operators, hyperscalers, and GPU-as-a-service providers. Further details on specifications and location weren’t shared.

The first facilities are projected to be ready for service by Q3 of 2026.

Clement Goh, DIG CEO, said: “Thailand is a core market for DIG’s Asia Pacific strategy, and our gigawatt plan reflects our commitment to driving transformative projects in the region. Collaborating with STP, a partner with deep local resources, reinforces our confidence in building a sustainable digital infrastructure ecosystem.”

Npairoj Piempongsant, founder and chairman of STP, added: “This collaboration with DIG marks a significant milestone, validating the industrial plan we have long championed. The EEC is at the forefront of Thailand’s transformation, and we are excited to lay the groundwork for a digital infrastructure network that will position the region as a Southeast Asian leader.”

Goh was previously Southeast Asia CEO at STT GDC and fiber firm Xenith IG, and was Southeast Asia MD at Equinix.

Doma co-founder and chief strategy officer, Brandon Amber, was previously head of business development at DigitalBridge. CFO Corinne Chong was previously CFO of Vantage’s APAC unit.

In an interview with W.Media, Goh said the land, water, and the majority of the planned 1.5GW of power have already been secured and will be available from “day one.”

As well as to renewables such as solar, negotiations are ongoing to access hydroelectric power across the Thai border from Laos.

“We are not getting into operations. We do not want to compete with any of the operators. We just want to make sure that we provide the ability for them to operate,” Goh said.

Beyond Thailand, Goh said he is looking at Southeast Asia, Australia, and potentially North Asia. He told the publication discussions are ongoing in Australia, and that DIG is backed by a United States real estate fund which is working with DIG as its platform for Asia.

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