- Tetracore Energy Group, Huawei, and Inspirive Technologies will build a $400m, 20MW Tier III data centre in Ogun State.
- The facility will drive AI, cloud, and digital growth while reducing reliance on offshore hosting.
Tetracore Energy Group has partnered with Huawei and Inspirive Technologies to develop a $400 million Tier III data centre at the Tetracore Energy Park in Ogun State. This project introduces an “energy-to-digital” model that directly tackles Nigeria’s persistent power instability while accelerating digital infrastructure development. As a result, the 20MW facility will serve as a critical backbone for the country’s growing digital ecosystem.
Moreover, the partners will complete the project within 10 to 12 months and build it to global Tier III standards. Consequently, the facility will deliver high redundancy and strong operational resilience required by financial institutions, government agencies, and global cloud providers.
Olakunle Williams, President and CEO of Tetracore Energy Group, emphasised that reliable energy drives digital transformation. He explained that the company designed the Energy Park to support large-scale, complex projects. Therefore, this development reinforces Tetracore’s ability to integrate energy and technology while enabling long-term economic growth.
Meanwhile, each partner contributes distinct strengths. Tetracore provides a dedicated energy backbone powered by its 100MW Independent Power Plant, while Huawei delivers advanced data centre technology. In addition, Inspirive Technologies contributes local expertise to ensure scalability and execution. Huawei also highlighted its focus on efficiency, noting that the facility will meet global standards while supporting Nigeria’s expanding digital ecosystem.
Furthermore, Inspirive Technologies stressed that the project strengthens Nigeria’s digital backbone by combining global innovation with local capacity. As a result, the data centre will support enterprise growth, cloud adoption, and long-term digital transformation.
As artificial intelligence adoption accelerates across Africa, demand for high-performance computing and low-latency processing continues to rise. Therefore, the facility is purpose-built to handle AI-driven workloads and advanced analytics. At the same time, it reduces reliance on offshore hosting and improves national data security.
By locating the data centre within the Energy Park, the partners ensure a stable and dedicated power supply. The facility bypasses national grid constraints and guarantees reliability for critical digital operations. It will serve high-growth sectors such as fintech, telecommunications, e-commerce, education, and emerging technology startups across Africa.