First of its kind MoU in Singapore and Southeast Asia looks to infuse Singapore’s digital economy with skilled technical talent to take on critical data center and AI roles.
SINGAPORE, March 25, 2026 /PRNewswire/ — The Institute of Technical Education (ITE) and BDx Data Centers (BDx) today announced the signing of a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) to develop a future‑ready talent pipeline for Singapore’s rapidly expanding digital infrastructure sector.
The MoU covers all three ITE colleges and will provide students with hands-on training at BDx’s AI-ready SIN1 facility, which also hosts a quantum computing test bed, creating structured pathways to employment in one of Asia’s fastest-growing technology sectors.
The initiative directly supports Singapore’s Green Data Centre Roadmap and Smart Nation objectives by addressing the rising demand for skilled professionals to operate the critical digital infrastructure powering AI, financial systems, and essential services across all sectors. The collaboration ensures ITE students gain the competencies needed to maintain Singapore’s resilient, high-performance digital backbone.
“Data centers are the backbone of the AI revolution,” said Mayank Srivastava, Chief Executive Officer of BDx Data Centers. “By building a pipeline of skilled local talent with ITE, we are reinforcing Singapore’s resilience and long-term leadership in AI and digital infrastructure. Our students will gain the practical competencies needed to support mission-critical operations that power everything from financial services to emerging AI applications.”
Mr Peter Lam, CEO of ITE, said “We are pleased to partner with BDx, whose strong commitment to developing local talent aligns closely with our mission of building a skilled, future‑ready technical workforce. Through this collaboration, ITE will work with BDx to embed real‑world data centre operational scenarios into our teaching modules, ensuring our students graduate with practical, job‑ready competencies that meet the sector’s rapidly evolving technical demands.”
According to the Asia-Pacific Data Centre Association (APDCA), Singapore’s data center sector currently supports 7,000 high-value jobs—a figure projected to nearly triple by 2030, with economic contributions growing 8.9-fold over the same period. As Singapore’s data center industry expands to meet surging demand for cloud computing and AI infrastructure, the collaboration addresses a critical need for locally trained technical talent.
