Malaysia’s data center policy is guided by the Data Centre Framework overseen by the Data Centre Task Force (DCTF), co-chaired by MITI and the Ministry of Digital. Key policies mandate strict sustainability, energy efficiency, and localized economic growth to balance the nation’s massive digital boom with its net-zero goals.

Core Policy Pillars
- Centralized Approval: The Malaysian Investment Development Authority (MIDA) acts as the principal agency for evaluating and approving all new data center projects and expansions.
- Energy Efficiency (PUE): To curb soaring power demands, hyperscale facilities (>21 MW capacity) are recommended to achieve a Power Usage Effectiveness (PUE) of 1.4 or lower. Tax incentives are tied to meeting these efficiency thresholds.
- Water Usage (WUE): Facilities are required to target a Water Usage Effectiveness (WUE) of 2.2 \(m^{3}\)/MWh or lower (with a 10-year target to improve to 2.0 \(m^{3}\)/MWh). Developers must avoid designated water-stressed zones.
- Green Building Standards: Projects must adhere to green certification standards, such as the Green Building Index Data Centre Tool.
Investment Incentives & Status
Operators can qualify for Malaysia Digital (MD) status, which provides access to the Bill of Guarantees. Benefits include: [1]
- Tax Exemptions: Income tax exemptions and Investment Tax Allowances.
- Duty Exemptions: Exemption on import duties for multimedia/server equipment.
- Foreign Worker Flexibility: Allowances to employ foreign knowledge workers.
- DESAC Scheme: Specialized tax incentives designed to support the

