Private Network Check Readiness - TeckNexus Solutions

LG CNS & VNPT to build hyperscale AI data center in Vietnam

Vietnam is entering the hyperscale AI data center map, with VNPT and LG CNS positioning to meet local and regional demand. For telecom operators and enterprises, now is the time to align AI roadmaps with data center strategy: plan for high-density racks and liquid cooling, secure GPU capacity, engineer diverse connectivity, and build energy resilience. As the regions AI infrastructure forms, those who co-design workload placement, interconnect, and power from the outset will gain durable cost and performance advantages.
LG CNS & VNPT to build hyperscale AI data center in Vietnam
Image Credit: LG CNS

LG CNS has signed a memorandum of understanding with Vietnam Posts and Telecommunications Group (VNPT) and Korea Investment Real Asset Management to develop a hyperscale artificial intelligence data center in Vietnam. The agreement, announced at the KoreaVietnam Business Forum in Seoul, creates a joint technical working group to design and deliver an AI-ready facility spanning construction, servers, storage, and network systems. For VNPT Vietnam’s largest state-owned telecom operator, and LG CNS, an LG Group affiliate with deep data center experience, the deal aligns with Vietnam’s national digital transformation agenda and the region’s accelerating demand for AI infrastructure.

Why Vietnam’s AI infrastructure is scaling fast in Southeast Asia


Southeast Asia’s digital infrastructure market is scaling fast, with research estimating growth from roughly $14 billion in 2024 to more than $30 billion by 2030. Vietnam sits at the intersection of several demand drivers: enterprise cloud adoption, 5G and fiber buildouts, digital government programs, and a wave of AI use cases in manufacturing, logistics, and smart cities. AI training and inference workloads are concentrating near data sources and user populations, pushing demand for GPU-optimized capacity with high-density power and advanced cooling. A VNPTLG CNS facility positions Vietnam to host sovereign, low-latency AI services while giving regional and global tenants another location option beyond Singapore, Johor, and Jakarta.

Architecture: GPU-optimized, liquid-cooled, high-density AI data center design

The partnership covers the full stack required for AI-grade capacity. LG CNS will bring data center design and operations capabilities and integrate core infrastructurecompute, storage, and high-throughput networkingsized for GPU clusters. The companies have indicated the build will include high-density racks and cooling technologies suited to AI workloads, with contributions from LG Group affiliates such as LG Electronics for thermal systems and LG Energy Solution for battery platforms and energy resilience. The working group will coordinate facility design with hardware and network systems to ensure predictable performance and scalability for model training and large-scale inference.

Jakarta AI data center blueprint, LG CNS will adapt for Vietnam

This Vietnam announcement follows LG CNS’s recent win in Indonesia, where the company plans an 11-story AI data center in Jakarta via a joint venture with Sinar Mas Group. That facility starts at 30 MW with a roadmap to 220 MW and capacity for more than 100,000 servers. It is designed with GPU-specialized infrastructure, hybrid air-and-liquid cooling, and high-density racks, alongside environmentally minded HVAC controls. Connectivity planning emphasizes neutral interconnect options and proximity to national backbone and subsea cable routes. The Jakarta program offers a blueprintphased power, density-first design, and an ecosystem-oriented interconnect fabric that LG CNS can adapt to Vietnam’s regulatory and network context.

What AI-ready data centers mean for telecom, cloud, and SaaS in Vietnam

For telecom operators, AI-ready data centers create a foundation to monetize 5G, fiber, and edge assets. VNPT can bundle AI infrastructure with cloud services, private 5G, and managed data platforms for industries like electronics, automotive, and consumer goodskey sectors in Vietnam’s export economy. For hyperscalers and SaaS providers, a carrier-aligned, hyperscale site in Vietnam offers a new colocation option with potential for low-latency zones and data residency compliance. For enterprises, proximity to AI capacity reduces data gravity costs and improves performance for computer vision, predictive maintenance, and supply chain optimization.

Execution risks: power, cooling, GPU supply, interconnect, and compliance

Power and cooling. AI clusters require sustained, high-density power per rack and efficient heat removal. Expect hybrid liquid cooling designs, battery systems for continuity, and aggressive PUE targets. Grid interconnection timelines and renewable procurement will be critical.

Supply chain. Securing next-gen GPUs, high-speed interconnects, and liquid cooling components remains a constraint. Early commitments and multi-vendor strategies will matter.

Connectivity and interconnect. Diverse fiber routes to domestic backbones and multiple subsea systems are essential for resilience and latency. Neutral on-ramps to cloud providers and internet exchanges will influence tenant mix.

Regulation and security. Compliance with data localization, cybersecurity, and critical infrastructure rules will shape design. Facilities supporting sovereign AI will need robust isolation and governance controls.

Aligning with Vietnam’s digital transformation: smart factories, logistics, and smart cities

Beyond the data center, VNPT and LG CNS plan collaboration in smart engineering, including smart factories and logistics. This aligns with government programs targeting automation, industrial IoT, and smart city platforms. A domestic AI data center can anchor these initiatives by bringing inference closer to production lines and transport hubs, enabling reliable, low-latency analytics and computer vision at scale.

What to watch: site, phased power, rack density, interconnect, and anchor tenants

Site selection and phasing. Look for clarity on location near Hanoi, Ho Chi Minh City, or central hubs, plus initial MW capacity and expansion milestones.

Design standards and density. Watch for targets around rack densities, liquid cooling adoption, and certifications that signal uptime and operational maturity.

Interconnect ecosystem. Indicators include carrier-neutral positioning, dark fiber options, and cloud on-ramps that attract AI-native and cloud tenants.

Energy strategy. Details on grid connections, battery storage, and renewable power purchasing will determine operating costs and sustainability credentials.

Anchor customers. Early commitments from VNPT business units, public sector workloads, or global AI tenants will de-risk the build.

Southeast Asia expansion: LG CNS AI data center strategy across the region

LG CNS has signaled plans to expand AI infrastructure services across Southeast Asia, including Singapore and Malaysia. Combining LG Group technologiescooling, batteries, and systems integrationwith regional partners and state-owned operators creates a repeatable entry model. The companys back-to-back announcements in Indonesia and Vietnam suggest it aims to be a preferred AI data center integrator in markets where digital demand is outpacing local capacity.

Action plan: how buyers and builders prepare for AI data centers in Vietnam

Vietnam is entering the hyperscale AI data center map, with VNPT and LG CNS positioning to meet local and regional demand. For telecom operators and enterprises, now is the time to align AI roadmaps with data center strategy: plan for high-density racks and liquid cooling, secure GPU capacity, engineer diverse connectivity, and build energy resilience. As the region’s AI infrastructure forms, those who co-design workload placement, interconnect, and power from the outset will gain durable cost and performance advantages.


Recent Content

2025 has seen major telecom and tech M&A activity, including billion-dollar deals in fiber, AI, cloud, and cybersecurity. This monthly tracker details key acquisitions, like AT&T buying Lumen’s fiber assets and Google’s $32B move for Wiz, highlighting how consolidation is shaping the competitive landscape.
Intel is spinning off its Network and Edge (NEX) division after posting a $2.9B loss, cutting 15% of its workforce, and pivoting to an AI-first strategy. The standalone NEX business will focus on networking and edge innovation, with Intel retaining an anchor investor role. The move underscores Intel’s restructuring to prioritize x86 and AI while seeking agility to compete with NVIDIA, AMD, and Broadcom in high-performance networking and 5G infrastructure.
Tesla and Samsung have forged a $16.5B partnership to manufacture AI6 (Hardware 6) chips at Samsung’s Texas fab. Designed as a unified AI hardware platform, these chips will power Tesla’s Full Self-Driving vehicles, Optimus humanoid robots, and AI training clusters. The deal strengthens Tesla’s AI roadmap while positioning Samsung as a key player in high-performance AI silicon and U.S. chip manufacturing.
India’s satellite internet market will focus on enterprise demand over consumer use, according to DoT’s Gulab Chand. With 4G and 5G networks covering most of the country, satellite services are expected to serve sectors like logistics, energy, and mining. Startups and government support are fueling India’s space-tech ecosystem, creating a hybrid terrestrial-satellite network model to power the nation’s digital growth.
At the WAIC in Shanghai, China proposed creating a global AI organization to establish shared governance standards and ensure equitable AI access. Premier Li Qiang emphasized balancing innovation with security while signaling Beijing’s ambition to position Shanghai as a global AI hub. The move highlights rising US-China tech tensions and the growing geopolitical weight of AI governance.
The world of wireless connectivity is evolving at an unprecedented pace, with private 5G networks, next-generation 6G innovations, and seamless WiFi-5G integration shaping industries from aviation to maritime logistics.
Whitepaper
Explore RADCOM's whitepaper 'Unleashing the Power of 5G Analytics' to understand how telecom operators can drive cost savings and revenue with 5G. Learn about NWDAF's role in network efficiency, innovative use cases, and analytics monetization strategies. Download now for key insights into optimizing 5G network performance....
Radcom Logo

It seems we can't find what you're looking for.

Download Magazine

With Subscription

Subscribe To Our Newsletter

Private Network Awards 2025 - TeckNexus
Scroll to Top

Private Network Awards

Recognizing excellence in 5G, LTE, CBRS, and connected industries. Nominate your project and gain industry-wide recognition.
Early Bird Deadline: Sept 5, 2025 | Final Deadline: Sept 30, 2025