AirTrunk’s taking advantage of a surge in cloud computing as companies that once ran in-house servers shift storage and processing off-site. AirTrunk provides its clients with the physical space, internet connections, power and cooling for their own servers. Research firm IDC estimates public cloud demand in the Asia Pacific region excluding Japan will hit US$47 billion ($64.2 billion) by 2020.
The bulk of the money raised in loans, about A$750 million, will be spent expanding its current facilities in Sydney and Melbourne, AirTrunk founder Robin Khuda said. AirTrunk, which measures inventory in terms of power capacity, will have 174 megawatts within 12 months, of which 100MW will be built up and ready for customers. The rest is made up of land that can be upgraded as needed.
The remainder of the money raised will go toward expanding into Asia with Singapore, Tokyo and Hong Kong key priorities. Facilities in the region are expected to be online by end-2020.
“Our Australian business grew faster than expected so it’s been a sizeable focus and key priority,” he said. “In the next three years I wouldn’t be surprised if we made an additional A$3-5 billion in investments.”