Google is planning to build a major artificial intelligence data centre on Christmas Island Australia’s remote Indian Ocean territory following a defence cloud deal with Canberra earlier this year. The project, not previously disclosed, involves leasing land near the island’s airport and securing local energy partnerships, according to official records reviewed by Reuters.
Why It Matters:
The island’s location, 350 km south of Indonesia, has made it a growing strategic frontier for Australia and its allies in monitoring Chinese naval movements. A data centre equipped for AI-enabled “command and control” could serve both commercial and defence purposes, bolstering regional intelligence infrastructure while providing Google with a strategic foothold in the Indo-Pacific.
Google: Declined to comment but has applied for environmental clearance to build a subsea cable linking Christmas Island to Darwin, where U.S. Marines are stationed.
Australian Defence Department: Offered no comment, though its three-year cloud agreement with Google supports defence modernization and intelligence-sharing goals.
Local Government: Christmas Island Shire President Steve Pereira said the council is weighing the project’s community impact, emphasizing job creation and infrastructure benefits for the island’s 1,600 residents.
Defence Experts: Former U.S. Navy strategist Bryan Clark said the centre would enable AI-driven surveillance and communications resilience against Chinese cyber or satellite interference. Retired Australian Navy Commodore Peter Leavy noted the island’s ideal position to monitor key regional sea routes such as the Malacca and Sunda Straits.
What’s Next:
Google’s proposal still requires environmental and local approvals. The planned undersea cable, to be installed by U.S. contractor SubCom, could integrate Christmas Island into a broader U.S.-Australia defence communication network. As the island becomes more central to Indo-Pacific security planning, the project could reshape both its economy and geopolitical importance.
With information from an exclusive Reuters report.
I'm Sana Khan. MPhil student of International Relations at the National Defence University, Islamabad. I specialize in foreign policy and global strategic affairs, with research experience on China’s role in world politics and the Russia–Ukraine war. My interests also extend to security studies, great power politics, and the intersection of geopolitics and foreign policy decision-making.
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