
SECTOR 05
Data Centres
The Caribbean's data should live in the Caribbean.
OVERVIEW
Regional demand for compute is rising — cloud services, AI workloads, financial infrastructure, and public-sector digitization all need capacity closer than Miami or Ashburn. Confiance pursues data centre development that gives the Caribbean sovereign, resilient compute of its own.
THE OPPORTUNITY
2%
of Latin America and the Caribbean's data-centre infrastructure sits in the Caribbean — the region's data overwhelmingly lives, and is governed, elsewhere.
~12% CAGR
Projected growth of the Caribbean data-centre market as cloud services, AI workloads, and digitized government demand capacity closer to home.
OUR APPROACH
Data centres sit at the intersection of the Group's other capabilities: they are designed to consume the power we develop, run on the connectivity we build, and serve the financial rails we pursue. That vertical logic — energy, network, compute, application — is the thesis.
THE VALUE CHAIN
- Power
- Connectivity
- Compute
- Regional services
WHERE WE’RE FOCUSED
- Regional compute and colocation capacity
- Renewable-powered facilities
- Edge infrastructure serving latency-sensitive Caribbean workloads
IN THE GROUP SYSTEM
Data centres sit where the Group's threads cross — designed to run on its renewables, its networks, and its financial rails.
QUESTIONS WE’RE OFTEN ASKED
- Why does the Caribbean need local data centres?
- Latency, resilience, and sovereignty. Today the region's data overwhelmingly lives abroad; local capacity keeps government services, financial systems, and AI workloads close to the people they serve.
- How will facilities be powered?
- The thesis is renewable-powered compute — data centres are designed to draw on the Group's energy development, turning Jamaica's solar resource into digital infrastructure.
- What scale of facility does Confiance pursue?
- Regional colocation and edge capacity sized to Caribbean demand — sovereign, resilient compute rather than speculative hyperscale.