World Bank’s IFC bets $20Mn on Philippine data center push

MANILA, PHILIPPINES — The World Bank Group’s private lending arm is moving to put US$20 million behind the Philippines’ bid to become Southeast Asia’s digital infrastructure leader.
According to a report from Manila Bulletin, the International Finance Corporation is considering a loan to YCO Global Cloud Centers Holdings Inc. to fund three data centers across the country, two already operational in Batangas province with a combined 50-megawatt capacity, and a third in Bataan province currently in the planning stage.
The potential investment reflects hardening international confidence in the Philippines as a destination for cloud computing, AI development, and enterprise outsourcing at scale.
Government-backed infrastructure de-risks the Bataan expansion
The two completed YCO facilities in Malvar, Batangas are already operational at 50 megawatts combined — giving the network an immediate production foundation before the Bataan site breaks ground.
The IFC conducted environmental and social reviews in February 2025 and March 2026, including on-site visits to both existing facilities and the planned Bataan location, signaling a near-term and seriously vetted investment decision.
Supporting infrastructure for the Bataan site — including a transmission line, water supply plant, and wastewater treatment facility — “will be built by the industrial park and the government for the site’s exclusive use,” the IFC confirmed, directly reducing YCO’s capital exposure and removing a key risk variable for the lender.
The government’s infrastructure commitment transforms the Bataan expansion from a private-sector project into a co-invested national infrastructure play.
High-profile leadership anchors Philippines’ 20-year digital hub vision
YCO Global Cloud Centers president and co-founder Nik de Ynchausti has set a clear long-range target: make “the Philippines Southeast Asia’s digital hub within the next two decades.”
The company’s leadership roster backs that ambition with institutional reach — former presidential spokesperson Abigail Valte serves as chief legal officer and former senator Franklin Drilon as senior advisor, giving YCO direct access to the regulatory relationships and policy channels that determine how fast infrastructure projects move in the Philippines.
The IFC’s year-spanning review process, covering two separate site assessments across 13 months, confirms the project has met a rigorous multilateral vetting standard. For a country actively competing with Singapore, Malaysia, and Indonesia for regional data center dominance, that endorsement carries weight beyond the $20 million figure itself.
For U.S. companies with outsourcing operations in the Philippines, data center capacity sets the ceiling on what services their partners can reliably deliver, it determines latency, uptime, and the ability to run AI-intensive workloads at scale.
The IFC’s commitment, amplified by government-built site infrastructure, accelerates the Philippines’ readiness to support the next generation of digital service delivery.
As demand from U.S. outsourcing buyers shifts toward AI-enabled, high-availability environments, investments like this one move the Philippines closer to meeting that bar and further ahead of regional competitors still making the case for international capital.

Independent




