Singapore quietly built Southeast Asia's largest sovereign AI cluster – and Jakarta wants in
Inside a 220-megawatt build-out that has rewired regional capital flows, ministerial visits, and the careers of a dozen researchers nobody had heard of six months ago.

On the edge of Tuas, behind two security fences and a row of palm trees nobody planted, sits a building most Singaporeans will never enter. Inside: 220 megawatts of compute, a private fibre ring to Changi, and the quiet ambition of a city-state to host the largest sovereign AI cluster in Southeast Asia.
The official story is procurement. The unofficial story — told over three months of conversations with engineers, ministry officials, and one very tired procurement lawyer — is more interesting.
Tuas-3, as it is internally called, was conceived in late 2024 as a hedge. Singapore's compute exports to the rest of ASEAN had quietly become an instrument of soft power, and the Economic Development Board wanted to keep the option open as workloads grew.
The wait-list, in order
By the time the second of three halls came online this March, the wait-list for capacity included two ministerial-grade tenants from Jakarta, a Hanoi-based foundation model lab, and three Bangkok unicorns.
Tuas-3 sidesteps the moratorium by operating as a regulated industrial customer of a power purchase agreement that nobody else can replicate.
Whether the model travels is the open question. Singapore's regulatory consistency is part of what makes the financing work; the next reveal is expected in Q3.


