Arab News
Arab News, Mon, Feb 10, 2025 | Shaaban 11, 1446
Saudi Arabia announces $14.9bn investment deals in LEAP 2025
Saudi Arabia:
Saudi Arabia has announced investments
worth $14.9 billion in the technological sector on the first day of the LEAP
2025 Tech Conference as the Kingdom continues to spearhead its economic
diversification efforts.
During the event’s opening ceremony, the Kingdom’s
Minister of Communications and Information Technology Abdullah Al-Swaha said
Saudi Arabia is witnessing significant growth in the industry, with the number
of jobs jumping from 150,000 in 2021 to 381,000 in 2024.
LEAP 2025 is a flagship event in the Kingdom, as
the nation eyes to become a global and regional tech hub, aligned with the goals
outlined in the Vision 2030 program.
“Under the leadership of His Royal Highness (Crown
Prince Mohammed bin Salman), and in partnership with you, our global innovators
and thinkers of the world — yet again, you keep making history in this dividing
moment and announcing $14.9 billion worth of investments and announcements in
this LEAP alone,” said Al-Swaha.
“The numbers speak for themselves. As a digital
economy collectively, we (MENA region) have grown by 73 percent to $260 billion
in the region from 2021 to 2024. The Kingdom represents 50 percent of it. As a
tech force, as His Royal Highness said this region is the new Europe,” he added.
“In terms of growth, we jumped from 150,000 tech force to 381,000 in Saudi, and
as a result, the region grows,” Al-Swaha said.
Highlighting Saudi Arabia’s progress in the
technological sector, the minister said his country currently has seven
unicorns, while the region has 15.
“If you look at the Kingdom alone, if you put it
in the EU zone, we will be the fifth largest tech hub in Europe. If you use
unicorns and startups as a proxy for growth, the region grew to 15 unicorns, and
the Kingdom grew from two unicorns to seven,” said Al-Swaha.
Major investment deals
During the event, Groq, a US-based artificial
intelligence firm, announced investing $1.5 billion in its project developed in
association with Saudi Aramco to launch the world’s largest AI inferencing data
center in the Kingdom, following a memorandum of understanding signed in
September.
The inferencing data center is expected to play a
crucial role in Aramco Digital’s vision to leverage advanced technologies that
drive operational excellence and support Vision 2030.
The event witnessed Alat, owned by Saudi Arabia’s
Public Investment Fund, and Chinese tech giant Lenovo joining hands to establish
an advanced manufacturing and technology center based on AI and robotics.
Lenovo also announced the decision to
establish its regional headquarters in the Kingdom.
China-based retail and e-commerce company Alibaba
said it will launch an AI empowerment program in cooperation with Tuwaiq Academy
— the training arm of the Saudi Federation for Cybersecurity.
US-based Databricks also pledged to invest $300
billion over the next three years to upskill Saudi citizens, build the company’s
business in the Kingdom, and contribute to the local digital economy.
SambaNova, another US software firm, agreed
to invest $140 million to build advanced AI infrastructure in Saudi Arabia.
Gulf Data Hub, in cooperation with London-based
investment firm KKR, announced it will develop data centers with a capacity of
300 megawatts to strengthen the Kingdom’s leadership as a global destination for
AI.
American cloud-based software company Salesforce
said it will invest $500 million in the region and establish its regional
headquarters in the Kingdom.
Chinese cloud computing service Tencent Cloud has
committed to investing $150 million in local infrastructure, resources, and
partnerships within the technology sector over the coming years to support
Vision 2030.
The President of Google for the Europe, Middle
East, and Africa region, Tara Brady, said the tech giant will contribute $70
billion to the Kingdom’s economy over the next 10 years.
“Google is committed to the region and the
Kingdom. We believe this is the future. Google is doubling down, we believe,
over the next 10 years, we could be contributing $70 billion to the economy,”
said Brady.
He added: “We are going to be skilling Saudi
nationals, over the next 10 years, one million. We will also scale up the
Kingdom to become the number one AI provider for the world.”
Google Cloud announced investments in digital
infrastructure for AI by launching a global hub in Saudi Arabia to serve
regional and global demand.
LEAP 2025 also attracted strategic investments in
infrastructure and AI, along with startup funding rounds valued at over $10.9
billion.
Steering ahead in the intelligent age
Al-Swaha said Saudi Arabia is trying to avoid
division and polarization as innovation takes center stage globally.
“In the analog and digital world, we were talking
about the Global North and the Global South. For every dollar made in the Global
South, somebody makes three times to five times in the Global North, and that is
not acceptable.
“For the intelligent age, this will even go
bigger, where it is projected that only a billion to two will join this
exclusive club called the intelligent age, and 6.5 billion by 2030 will be left
behind,” said Al-Swaha.
He added: “I would argue that leaving anyone
behind in the intelligent age is as devastating as depriving an individual from
getting access to oxygen, water and food.”
The Saudi minister said the Kingdom is trying to
ensure inclusivity in the technological sector, therefore ensuring prosperity
for all in the future.
The minister also said the digital economy is
currently valued at $16 trillion. However, 2.6 billion people remain excluded,
including 100 million in the Global North and 2.5 billion in the Global South.
“Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman has bet on
closing down the divide of the digital age by fueling cloud, entrepreneurship,
tech, for the region and the world, and this is why we are laser-focused on
continuing to be the biggest success story in closing down the skills divide,
digital divide, and governance divide in partnership with you,” he said.
Al-Swaha underscored the growth of the reduction
of the gender gap in the technological sector and added that women’s empowerment
in Saudi Arabia’s tech industry has already surpassed the EU, G20, and Silicon
Valley.
Highlighting the necessity to avoid polarization,
the minister said: “We have to celebrate the chat GPT moment of 2022, but we
also have to appreciate the DeepSeek moment. The world does not need
polarization in the intelligent age. We need to work collectively to celebrate
these advancements, where DeepSeek so far is beating all AI models.”