Tachyon9 Corporation has signed a binding 15-year memorandum of understanding with Nidar Infrastructure Limited, the parent and majority shareholder of Indian hyperscale operator Yotta Data Services, to anchor the first 100 megawatts of its planned Nakota AI Data Campus. The deal matters less for its headline dollar figure than for what it does structurally: it secures an anchor tenant before a single rack is energized, the gating step every large data-center buildout must clear before it can finance the rest.

Why power, not floor space, is the unit that matters

Modern AI data centers are sized in megawatts, not square feet. A campus rated for "up to 1 GW of total capacity," as Tachyon9 describes Nakota's full build, measures how much electricity it is engineered to draw and dissipate. The industry counts power because a rack of current-generation GPUs can pull tens of kilowatts, an order of magnitude above a traditional server rack; the binding constraint is rarely real estate but the power, the grid interconnection, and the cooling for the heat that density produces. That is why the partner matters most here: Nidar's U.S. affiliate is, per the companies, set to become the anchor customer for the first 100 MW phase while participating as an economic partner. An anchor commitment of this kind underwrites the construction debt and converts a development concept into a financeable asset.

The one number that matters, and what it does not cover

The dollar figures are easy to misread. Tachyon9 said the arrangement contemplates approximately US$156 million in annual contracted infrastructure revenue at full utilization of the initial 100 MW phase. Multiply that by the 15-year term and you reach the roughly US$2.34 billion the company associates with the deal. That $2.34 billion is a 15-year cumulative total tied to the first 100 MW, not an annual run-rate, and not a figure for the full campus.

Nakota's "up to 1 GW" is the full development target, ten times the anchored first phase. Tachyon9 has not contracted revenue against that target; it holds a signed letter of intent for the entire 1 GW development and a single anchor MOU covering the first tenth of it. Treating the campus as ten times the $2.34 billion would be the analytical error this structure invites, and the company itself does not make that extrapolation. Tachyon9's own stated contribution is approximately $64 million in equipment and land-option rights, alongside that 1 GW LOI.

What Yotta and Nidar bring to the operating side

Yotta is described as India's largest operator of NVIDIA GPU compute infrastructure, holding an estimated 60-70% of the country's deployed GPU capacity across campuses in Navi Mumbai, Gujarat, and Greater Noida, with a fourth planned in Telangana. In February 2026 it announced a US$2 billion-plus investment to deploy 20,736 liquid-cooled NVIDIA Blackwell Ultra GPUs at Greater Noida, liquid cooling being the practical requirement at that thermal density, with a four-year NVIDIA DGX Cloud engagement it values at over US$1 billion and an allocation of more than 10,000 GPUs to India's government-backed IndiaAI Mission. The relevance is operational expertise, not capital: running a GPU supercluster at high utilization, orchestrating an AI cloud, and holding liquid-cooling loops within tolerance is what Yotta supplies. Darshan Hiranandani, chairman of Nidar and a Yotta co-founder, framed it as bringing "world-class hyperscale operational capability" and "a demonstrated NVIDIA technology partnership" to the U.S. project. Yotta's CEO is Sunil Gupta.

The public-vehicle angle, in proportion

The investable detail for public-market readers is Nixxy, Inc. (NASDAQ: NIXX), the AI communications and data-infrastructure company that is the proposed public vehicle for the combination. Shahal Khan, Tachyon9's chairman and CEO, called the agreement "much more than a customer relationship" and "strategic validation from one of the world's leading AI infrastructure operators." In proportion, this is a proposed combination governed by a binding MOU and an LOI, not a closed transaction. Separately, Yotta said it is pursuing pre-IPO financing at a targeted valuation of roughly $4-6 billion and a $600-900 million growth raise, its own listing track, distinct from the NIXX rollup.

TLDR

Tachyon9 has an anchor customer and an economic partner for the first 100 MW of a campus designed to scale to 1 GW; Yotta supplies the operating credibility, while the combination and the listing remain proposals at the MOU and LOI stage. What to watch is whether the next phases convert from intent into contracted, financed capacity.

Disclosure: NewsNTech is an independent financial-news publication. This article is editorial content and not investment advice. NewsNTech holds no position in the securities mentioned and was not compensated for this coverage. Figures are drawn from the company's press release.