Arab News
Arab news, Sat, Nov 01, 2025 | Jumada al-Awwal 10, 1447
Saudi Arabia scales AI ambitions amid infrastructure realities
Saudi Arabia:
As global powers accelerate artificial
intelligence investments, Saudi Arabia is confronting a defining moment in
realizing its digital transformation ambitions.
Through Vision 2030, the Kingdom has made
foundational investments in sovereign cloud infrastructure, high-performance
computing, and international partnerships, positioning itself as a regional AI
frontrunner.
However, industry experts caution that translating
these ambitions into nationwide impact requires addressing three core
challenges: modernizing legacy hardware systems, creating unified data
architectures, and cultivating specialized compute talent.
The central question remains: Does Saudi Arabia
possess the infrastructure needed to deliver AI at visionary scale?
Fadi Kanafani, general manager for
SoftServe in the Middle East, said the Kingdom’s progress is already tangible.
“Saudi is beyond the announcement stage; now we have action on the ground,” he
told Arab News.
Kanafani cited Humain’s AI-driven public
service automation and AdopTech’s industrial sandboxes for manufacturing
innovation as examples of execution beyond strategy. He also noted Aramco
Digital’s alliances with hardware pioneers such as Groq — known for ultra-low
latency inference engines — and Cerebras, a leader in wafer-scale computing, as
evidence of cutting-edge capacity being embedded directly into the national
ecosystem.
Global cloud providers are amplifying this
momentum through substantial infrastructure commitments. Oracle’s second Riyadh
region enhances sovereign data capabilities for government entities, while
Amazon Web Services’ upcoming 2026 regional hub marks one of the Middle East’s
largest cloud investments, Kanafani said.
At the academic front, Google Cloud and Microsoft
Azure have launched AI innovation labs at King Abdullah University of Science
and Technology, while Salesforce’s decision to base its regional headquarters in
Riyadh signals growing international confidence in the Kingdom’s digital
roadmap.
Suhail Hasanain, NetApp’s senior director
for the Middle East and Africa, echoed that alignment.
“Saudi Arabia has made remarkable progress in
establishing foundations for AI-driven transformation,” he said. “Vision 2030’s
prioritization of data sovereignty and advanced compute resources embeds
artificial intelligence at the heart of national development — from Neom’s
cognitive city ambitions to the National Data Bank’s unified information
architecture.”
Legacy systems and talent gaps
Despite robust infrastructure growth, large-scale
enterprise adoption still faces operational barriers. Outdated financial
systems, fragmented electronic health records, and siloed industrial datasets
continue to constrain AI’s full potential.
Kanafani pointed to these friction points:
“Most organizations remain anchored to legacy systems fundamentally incompatible
with AI’s data requirements. Critical information exists in disconnected silos —
patient records isolated from diagnostic AI tools, equipment maintenance logs
separated from supply chain optimization algorithms.”
Regulatory complexity compounds the challenge.
“Governance frameworks vary significantly across healthcare, financial services,
and critical infrastructure sectors, creating compliance uncertainty during
scaling,” Kanafani added.
Hasanain stressed the human capital
dimension. “Beyond physical infrastructure, we confront a severe shortage of
specialized talent — data engineers capable of curating trusted datasets,
machine learning operations specialists to productionize models, and AI
governance experts to ensure ethical deployment.”
He outlined three pillars for closing these gaps:
establishing benchmark datasets, building hybrid systems that balance
performance with sovereignty, and developing comprehensive workforce pipelines
to operationalize AI across sectors.
From pilots to real-world impact
Across energy, healthcare, and logistics,
real-world applications are already demonstrating AI’s potential when aligned
with national priorities.
In energy, Aramco uses predictive maintenance
algorithms to anticipate equipment failures before they disrupt operations. In
healthcare, institutions like King Faisal Specialist Hospital leverage computer
vision tools for faster, more accurate medical imaging analysis. Meanwhile,
Neom’s Oxagon industrial zone applies digital twin technology to simulate
logistics before implementation.
NetApp underpins such innovations through
adaptable infrastructure solutions. “We empower organizations to orchestrate AI
workloads seamlessly across sovereign cloud environments like STC’s and global
hyperscalers like Microsoft Azure,” Hasanain explained.
He added: “For a major Riyadh-based financial
institution, we integrated transaction data across 200 branches into a unified
real-time fraud detection platform — significantly enhancing security while
reducing operational costs.”
SoftServe, meanwhile, applies a co-creation
model. “We partner deeply with Saudi organizations to build purpose-driven
solutions,” Kanafani said.
“For a Tabuk agricultural enterprise, we developed
a custom AI model that optimizes irrigation by synthesizing satellite imagery,
soil moisture sensors, and weather pattern analysis – delivering measurable
water conservation outcomes.”
Kanafani emphasized that organizational
culture must evolve alongside technology. Their approach embeds change
management from the outset, ensuring readiness for transformation.
Balancing sovereignty and collaboration
The interplay between national priorities and
international innovation continues to define Saudi Arabia’s AI journey.
“Data sovereignty remains non-negotiable for sensitive applications in national
security, central banking, and citizen services,” Hasanain said. “Yet strategic
collaborations with global technology leaders accelerate capability development
– such as deploying NVIDIA’s advanced DGX systems while simultaneously training
Saudi engineers to manage them locally.”
Kanafani pointed to hybrid models gaining
traction: “Leading Saudi manufacturers increasingly adopt blended architectures
— maintaining proprietary process data on localized secure servers while
leveraging global cloud scalability for supply chain optimization and market
intelligence applications. This harmonizes control with flexibility.”
As Saudi Arabia develops national AI ethics
guidelines, Kanafani underscored proactive design: “Responsible innovation
requires embedding bias detection and algorithmic transparency mechanisms
directly into AI systems during development — not attempting remediation after
deployment reveals ethical shortcomings.”
Building the AI workforce
The Kingdom’s Future Skills initiative aims to
train 20,000 AI specialists by 2030 through academic partnerships and hands-on
industry experience.
Hasanain noted the importance of
integrating learning with real-world exposure. “Oracle’s developer academies
provide vital theoretical foundations, but sustainable capability requires
integrating graduates into real-world industry projects where they confront
practical scaling challenges.”
Still, both experts warn that success will hinge
on disciplined execution. “Underestimating cybersecurity requirements or data
governance complexity undermines even the most sophisticated AI initiatives,”
Kanafani cautioned.
As the global race for AI infrastructure
intensifies, Saudi Arabia’s investments have positioned it to translate ambition
into regional leadership. Yet, as Hasanain noted, sustaining momentum will
require operational focus.
“Our trajectory is clear, but achieving scalable impact demands relentless focus
on data accessibility and talent density — transforming pilot potential into
nationwide transformation.”
Kanafani concluded with a vision of
distinction: "The Kingdom’s unique opportunity lies in synthesizing global
technological excellence, local problem-solving ingenuity, and deeply rooted
ethical traditions. This fusion could position Saudi Arabia as the world’s first
values-led AI superpower — where technological leadership serves societal
advancement.”