5 days ago
DayOne breaks ground on first Singapore data centre to trial hydrogen-based power generation
[SINGAPORE] Singapore-based DayOne Data Centers is developing the nation's first data centre to pilot on-site hydrogen-based power generation.
The company broke ground for the 20 megawatt data centre on Friday (Jul 25). The artificial intelligence-ready facility with a gross floor area of approximately 40,000 square metres is located within the Jurong East Data Centre Cluster. This is DayOne's first data centre in Singapore.
The facility will be fully powered by renewable energy through a power purchase agreement with Sembcorp Power. DayOne is also partnering the National University of Singapore to pilot on-site solid oxide fuel cell power generation.
Hydrogen could supply half of the Republic's power needs by 2050, according to the National Hydrogen Strategy released by the Ministry of Trade and Industry in 2022.
DayOne was one of four data centre operators selected by the Singapore Economic Development Board and Infocomm Media Development Authority for the pilot Data Centre - Call for Application (DC-CFA) exercise in 2023.
The other data centres selected for the DC-CFA were Equinix, Microsoft and a tie-up between AirTrunk and ByteDance.
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DayOne was formerly the international arm of Chinese data centre firm GDS. It was established in 2022 and began operating as an independent group in 2025.
'This facility marks our commitment to Singapore as both (a) home base and regional hub, while highlighting our long-term vision to power South-east Asia's digital transformation with green infrastructure,' said DayOne's chief executive officer Jamie Khoo in a press statement.
The Singapore data centre forms part of DayOne's larger ambition to support digital transformation across the Singapore-Johor-Riau Islands Growth Triangle.
DayOne secured RM15 billion (S$4.6 billion) in dual-tranche green financing to support capital expenditure to develop its Johor data centres. It also operates data centres in markets such as Indonesia, Thailand, Japan and Hong Kong.