Google is making plans to move ahead with talks to place an artificial intelligence data hub on Christmas Island, a small Australian territory in the Indian Ocean, according to reports.
The plan follows a cloud services agreement signed earlier this year with Australia’s Department of Defence, according to documents seen by Reuters and interviews with officials. Exact details, including the size, cost and intended uses of the site, have not been made public.
Christmas Island sits about 350 km south of Indonesia. Defence experts say a data centre there would be strategically useful, since the island is increasingly seen as a vantage point for watching submarine and naval activity in the region.
Local records and council papers show Google is in advanced talks to lease land near the island’s airport. Those records also point to a separate deal with a local mining firm to secure power for the site.
Google framed the work as part of wider efforts to strengthen undersea cable links and digital resilience across Australia and the Indo‑Pacific. Yet the company also sought to tone down reports about the project’s scale. “We are not constructing ‘a large artificial intelligence data centre’ on Christmas Island,” a Google spokeswoman said in a statement, adding more details would be shared soon.
Planning documents mention a proposed “additional future cable system” that would link Christmas Island with Asia. Local officials and some defence analysts say such a link would add value to regional communications and surveillance capabilities.
At this stage, the project remains confidential. Sources and documents indicate ongoing land and energy negotiations, but public confirmation of the full plan is still pending.
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