Australia’s first portable AI factory has arrived in Australia, built on clean energy that the national grid cannot absorb and positioned to attract global technology investment to Australian soil
SYDNEY & SAN FRANCISCO--BUSINESS WIRE--
WinDC today announced a strategic partnership with Armada to deploy Australia’s first network of portable AI factories powered by renewable energy. The partnership is designed to position Australia as a destination for global technology investment, using the country’s vast clean energy resources to power AI computing infrastructure that the world’s biggest technology companies are actively looking to build. The first unit is already on Australian soil.
This press release features multimedia. View the full release here: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20260315184236/en/

WinDC Modular AI Factory Arrives in Sydney
Australia wasted 7.2 terawatt-hours of clean energy in 2025, up from 4.5 terawatt-hours the year before. This is forecast to grow to over 10 terawatt-hours in 2026, because the national power grid cannot scale to transport generated electricity fast enough. WinDC’s model addresses this directly. Rather than extending poles and wires to carry power from regional renewable sites back to cities, WinDC places data centre infrastructure at the generation site, where the energy is created – avoiding the need to use the already congested transmission grid.
Under the partnership, WinDC will deploy 11 megawatts of modular data centres designed and built by Armada and its partners across renewable energy sites in New South Wales and other locations in the National Energy Market, as well as Western Australia. Initial locations include wind, solar and battery sites. Each unit deploys in approximately 90 days, runs on 100 percent renewable energy with zero Scope 2 emissions verified to the GPU-hour, and with a market leading price point. The units are shipping-container sized, ISO-conformant, and fully relocatable by truck.
“Australia has the wind, the sun, and the land to be a genuine force in global AI infrastructure. What has been holding us back is the grid. We identified that problem ten years ago working alongside renewable energy providers on the east coast, and this is the solution we built,” said Andrew Sjoquist, Founder and CEO of WinDC.
For renewable asset owners, hosting a WinDC unit converts curtailed generation into a commercial opportunity, thereby improving the yield of their generation asset. For the broader energy market, the localised consumption of electricity, as opposed to transmitting it long distances to metropolitan city-based data centres, reduces the demand and therefore investment required in electricity transmission networks – “the grid”. The units use a closed-loop cooling system that requires no water, a significant point of difference from conventional data centres.
“The demand for real-time data processing and AI inference is growing faster than centralised infrastructure can support,”said Dan Wright, Co-Founder and CEO of Armada. “This partnership with WinDC enables sovereign AI factories to be built where energy is produced, delivering resilient, scalable compute without waiting on grid expansion in Australia.”
The partnership comes as Australia’s role in the global AI build-out is becoming a growing question of national economic policy. Australian superannuation funds are currently directing billions into data centre operators overseas. WinDC is building sovereign AI infrastructure on Australian soil, powered by Australian renewables, with an eye to attracting global technology companies to locate capacity in the country rather than in the United States or Europe.
Armada Edge Platform handles deployment and operations across distributed sites and integrates with the WinDC SWARM platform, which prioritises and manages the efficient use of renewable energy during operations.
Armada’s units are currently built in the United States and Europe. Armada and WinDC have agreed to a "Made in Australia" vision as part of the partnership, and are planning to shift to Australian-based production to commence once WinDC reaches a defined number of units in-country.
“WinDC’s partnership with Armada reflects a clear ‘Made in Australia’ commitment -aligning with national initiatives such as the National Reconstruction Fund and broader sovereign capability policies - to ensure that the next generation of AI-ready infrastructure is not only deployed here, but increasingly built, integrated, and scaled from Australia itself,” said Andrew Sjoquist.
About WinDC
WinDC is an Australian developer of modular, portable, energy-adjacent data centre infrastructure, co-locating AI and high-performance compute with renewable energy sources. WinDC deploys rapidly installable, relocatable data centres behind-the-meter to improve utilisation of Australia's abundant renewables and accelerate sovereign AI infrastructure at scale.
About Armada
Armada is a full-stack edge infrastructure company delivering compute, storage, connectivity, and sovereign AI/ML capabilities to the most remote and rugged industrial environments on Earth. From energy to defence, Armada enables organisations to operate at the edge—without compromise. For more information visit armada.ai.
View source version on businesswire.com: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20260315184236/en/
Contact details:
Justin Kelly || M+C Partners || 0408 215 858 || [email protected]