GYEONGJU, South Korea – In less than two years, Malaysia’s ambitious dream to become a regional AI powerhouse has moved from vision to reality.
What began as a conversation between Prime Minister Dato’ Seri Anwar Ibrahim and NVIDIA’s founder and CEO Jensen Huang in Kuala Lumpur back in December 2023 has now evolved into one of the most strategic tech collaborations in Southeast Asia.
Seated across from each other once again this time on the sidelines of the APEC Summit in South Korea the two leaders were joined by YTL Power International Managing Director Dato’ Seri Yeoh Seok Hong and Investment, Trade and Industry Minister Tengku Datuk Seri Utama Zafrul Tengku Abdul Aziz, in a meeting that symbolised Malaysia’s arrival on the global AI stage.
From Ambition to Action
In just 22 months, Malaysia has sprinted ahead. The National AI Office was launched under the Digital Ministry; a Sovereign AI Cloud was conceptualised; and ILMU, Malaysia’s first locally built large language model (LLM), was unveiled to great fanfare at the ASEAN AI Summit in August.
At the centre of this progress stands YTL Power’s state-of-the-art AI Data Centre in Kulai, Johor a futuristic 600MW facility built in partnership with NVIDIA.
Powered by NVL72 Grace Blackwell (GB200) GPUs and renewable solar energy, it isn’t just a technological marvel; it’s a statement that Malaysia can lead, not just follow, in the AI revolution.
“A New Chapter for Malaysia”
Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim called it a turning point.
“Malaysia aims to become a leading AI nation by 2030 leveraging AI to boost productivity, enhance public services, and build a sustainable, inclusive, and ethical digital economy,” he said.
“Establishing our own Sovereign AI is essential to developing a secure and trusted ecosystem. I congratulate YTL and NVIDIA for this milestone that will accelerate our national AI drive for the benefit of all Malaysians.”
Billions Committed, Confidence Renewed
Tengku Zafrul reaffirmed the government’s financial commitment, revealing that RM5.9 billion has been earmarked under Budget 2026 to strengthen the country’s AI sector.
“This investment underscores our determination to position Malaysia as the region’s premier AI hub,” he said.
“We’re not only promoting investment but driving integration across industries to enhance productivity and global competitiveness.”
The minister’s remarks reflected Malaysia’s broader digital transformation agenda — one that intertwines industrial strategy with the nation’s economic vision.
YTL’s Vision: Building Malaysia’s Digital Backbone
For Dato’ Seri Yeoh Seok Hong, the mission goes beyond technology it’s about sovereignty and self-reliance.
“It has become increasingly vital for nations to develop sovereign clouds to host government and citizen-facing AI services,” he said.
“With the YTL AI Cloud now operational and ILMU in motion, Malaysia will be among the first in the region to achieve true Sovereign AI capabilities.
“We thank the government for its foresight in creating the policy frameworks that made this possible.”

The YTL AI Cloud, located within the 1,640-acre YTL Green Data Center Campus, runs entirely on renewable energy from its own 500MW solar power facility a feat few global tech players can claim.
Beyond Symbolism: The Strategy Behind the Surge
Analysts say this moment is more than a ceremonial handshake. Malaysia’s AI playbook is deeply strategic one that blends infrastructure, investment, and innovation. The country isn’t just chasing the global trend; it’s building the backbone for a self-sustaining AI ecosystem that respects data sovereignty and energy sustainability.
Situated just 50 kilometres from Singapore’s major interconnection points, Johor’s YTL Green Data Center Park is set to become the new digital heartbeat of the region.
This partnership between Malaysia, YTL, and NVIDIA marks the beginning of a new industrial era, one where Malaysia is no longer merely a data consumer but a creator of digital intelligence.
“This is Malaysia’s coming-of-age moment in AI,” said one industry observer. “It’s not about following Silicon Valley it’s about defining our own path.”
As Malaysia turns its gaze towards 2030, the rhythm of this AI revolution is clear bold leadership, homegrown innovation, and a nation determined to shape its own digital destiny. -MalayaDailyToday




























































