India | 31 March 2026: National Grid’s decision to invest up to $400 million in an India-based Global Capability Centre (GCC) is less about expansion and more about where critical infrastructure decisions are made.

As one of the world’s largest energy infrastructure operators, National Grid delivers electricity and gas across the United Kingdom and the United States, serving over 7 million customers in the U.S. alone and powering key regions including the Midlands, Southwest, and South Wales in the UK. With major modernization programs such as the “Great Grid Upgrade” in the UK and “Upstate Upgrade” in New York, the company is actively reconfiguring its networks to support renewables, EV charging, and electrification at scale.

Operating in this environment, where energy systems are becoming more distributed and data-intensive, the India GCC is being set up to bring engineering, system modeling, and data intelligence closer to execution, reducing reliance on fragmented outsourcing models

The India GCC Is Being Built to Handle

The proposed centre, expected to employ around 1,000 professionals, will focus on functions that directly impact grid performance:

  • System modeling to simulate network behavior and future demand
  • Data management to process inputs from multiple infrastructure layers
  • Engineering support for network planning and optimization

From Infrastructure Management to System Intelligence

The challenge shifts from building infrastructure to managing interactions between energy sources, demand patterns, and system constraints.

This requires:

  • Continuous interpretation of grid data in real time
  • Scenario modeling for demand spikes and outages
  • Integration of new energy sources without destabilizing the network

A Structured Build Approach, Not Immediate Scale

National Grid is taking a phased approach, inviting partners to support the Build & Operate phase starting May 2026.

This allows the company to:

  • Establish capabilities with operational discipline
  • Transition gradually toward internal ownership
  • Align systems before scaling workforce

Insight Box: Why Energy Systems Now Depend on Continuous Modeling

Modern power grids are no longer static; they are constantly changing systems.

  1. Supply Is Variable – Renewables introduce fluctuations that require real-time balancing.
  2. Demand Is Becoming Less Predictable – EV adoption and electrification are creating new load patterns.
  3. Simulation Drives Decision-Making – Operators rely on scenario modeling to anticipate system stress.
  4. Data Is Central to Operations – Inputs from multiple sources must be processed continuously to maintain stability.

SSF Perspective

National Grid’s India GCC reflects a shift from infrastructure-led operations to system-led energy management.

As networks become more complex, the advantage will lie in the ability to integrate engineering, data, and decision-making into a single operating layer.

In that model, resilience is not just built through assets, it is maintained through the ability to continuously understand and adjust system behavior in real time.

Curated by SSF Global

Tracking the shifts shaping GCCs, enterprise ecosystems, and the future of global business.

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About SSF Global
SSF Global is a Global Community for Enterprise Function Leaders and serves as a research & advisory platform focused on Global Business Services (GBS), Global Capability Centres (GCCs), and the evolution of enterprise innovation in India and beyond. We track, publish, and partner in narratives that shape how capability centres transform into hubs of trust, intelligence, and sustainable growth. We also evaluate, assess and benchmark the GCCs for their performance, maturity and other parameters using our proprietary tools built from the knowledge gained from direct interaction with our members (GCCs & GBS).