Three markets. Standing relationships.
EOGSB holds Marketing Services Agreements with data centre operators across the United States, Malaysia and Indonesia, with wider coverage through partner facilities in ASEAN. Those agreements are why we see new allocation early — and, often, first.
Where we place capacity.
Where the AI compute demand is deepest and where the large GPU deployments are landing. We work wholesale and retail colocation across the primary and secondary US markets, with a working track record in high-density air-cooled placements at multi-megawatt scale — including a prior 128-node HGX B200 deployment.
Our home market and one of the fastest-growing data centre markets in the world, driven by power availability, land, and proximity to Singapore. We are on the ground here, we know which halls can genuinely take AI density, and we know which power commitments are contracted rather than aspirational.
The next capacity story in the region, with data-residency requirements that make in-country hosting a regulatory question and not just an economic one. We hold operator relationships covering the Jakarta metro and Batam.
Singapore, Thailand and Vietnam are served through partner facilities. Where a requirement is better answered outside our core three markets, we say so and we broker it there rather than force the deal into a market that does not fit.
Facility names, capacity positions and pricing are disclosed under NDA only. Availability changes constantly and nothing on this page is a guarantee of capacity.
Why we see capacity before it is marketed.
A data centre operator's hardest problem is filling new halls with tenants who are qualified, funded and ready to move.
EOGSB is contracted under Marketing Services Agreements with operators across our markets to bring exactly that kind of tenant. In practice the relationship runs both ways: when new allocation is released, or when contracted space comes back to the operator for replacement, we are on the list of parties who hear about it — frequently before it is generally marketed, and frequently with first preference.
For a client, that is the difference between choosing from what is left and choosing from what is coming.
Early sight of new allocation
Capacity, terms and pricing on halls that have not yet been broadly marketed.
Replacement space
Contiguous capacity that comes back to the operator often never reaches the open market. We frequently get first preference on it.
Qualified, funded demand
We bring tenants who have already been screened, who understand density, and who can sign. We do not waste an operator's time.
The network, answered.
Will you name the facilities you work with?
Not publicly, and not before an NDA. Facility names, capacity positions and pricing are commercially sensitive to the operators as much as to our clients. Once a mutual non-disclosure and non-circumvention agreement is in place and we understand your requirement, we name names.
What is a Marketing Services Agreement, in this context?
A contracted relationship under which EOGSB represents a facility's capacity into the market. It is what puts us on the operator's distribution list for new allocation and for space that is being released or replaced — which is why we frequently see capacity before it is generally marketed, and why we can move quickly on it.
Why the USA, Malaysia and Indonesia specifically?
The USA is where the neocloud and AI-training demand is deepest and where the large GPU deployments are landing. Malaysia — particularly Johor and the Klang Valley — has become one of the fastest-growing data centre markets in the world on the back of power availability and land. Indonesia is the next capacity story in the region. Those three markets cover most of what our clients actually ask for.
Send us the requirement. We come back with options.
Node count, GPU class, kW per rack, target market, in-service date. That is enough for us to open the conversation with the right suppliers and the right facilities. Under NDA from first contact.