SuperX AI's proposed 1-gigawatt computing park would be one of Central Asia's largest AI infrastructure projects if realized.
SuperX AI Technology Ltd. (NASDAQ:SUPX) met with Kazakhstan's Prime Minister Olzhas Bektenov at the World Economic Forum's Summer Davos in Dalian on June 23 to propose a phased 1-gigawatt AI computing park, marking the Singapore-based company's entry into Central Asia's digital infrastructure market.
"Kazakhstan boasts exceptional advantages in geopolitics, energy resources, and foreign investment policies, making it a strong potential anchor in our global computing network," Huang Chenhong, Chairman of SuperX, said.
Under the three-year proposal, a 200-megawatt cluster would target completion in 2027, followed by 300MW in 2028 and 500MW in 2029. The park would function as a cross-border computing node bridging Europe and Asia. Kazakhstan has designated 2026 as its Year of Digitalization and AI under the Digital Kazakhstan national strategy, with state investment arm Kazakhstan Invest actively seeking foreign partners to address a domestic shortfall in high-end computing capacity.
For SuperX, the project unlocks access to Central Asia's billion-scale digital infrastructure market and would complete its cross-border computing footprint spanning Europe and Asia. For Kazakhstan, the park would help close critical computing capacity gaps and reinforce its domestic AI ecosystem as the country positions itself as a regional digital hub.
What SuperX brings to the table
SuperX differentiates itself from pure hardware vendors through integrated end-to-end software and hardware deployment services. The company holds NVIDIA OEM partnership credentials, offers liquid cooling and high-voltage direct current (HVDC) solutions, and maintains a cross-border data compliance framework. It also operates production capacity at domestic and overseas manufacturing bases. The company proposed replicating its proven overseas data center operating model in Kazakhstan to shorten the project's time-to-production cycle.
The Kazakh side has invited SuperX's team to conduct local site-selection surveys to evaluate feasibility. Discussions also touched on establishing a tripartite joint working group to oversee land use, energy supply, fiscal and tax policies, and talent development.
Central Asia's computing gap
Kazakhstan's push for sovereign computing capacity reflects a broader trend across Central Asia, where domestic high-end computing supply falls well short of demand driven by AI adoption. The Digital Kazakhstan strategy aims to reduce reliance on foreign hardware and software while building the country into a regional digital hub. Prime Minister Bektenov, who also met with executives from CATL and Guangzhou Automobile Group at Summer Davos, has prioritized digital transformation and AI as pillars of Kazakhstan's economic reform agenda.
Investor implications
SuperX trades on the Nasdaq under SUPX. If the 1GW project advances, it would represent a significant scaling of the company's global infrastructure footprint, adding Central Asia to a network that already spans operations across multiple regions. The phased approach — 200MW by 2027 — allows for capital deployment in stages, reducing execution risk compared to a single large buildout. Further discussions and evaluations are planned to determine whether the proposed framework can be translated into concrete deliverables.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.