Mena’s data centre gold rush

9 June 2025

Commentary
Colin Foreman
Editor

Read the June issue of MEED Business Review

On 22 May, OpenAI announced its first international deployment of its frontier-scale AI infrastructure platform with the launch of Stargate UAE. 

Positioned as the foundation for the company’s long-term vision for artificial general intelligence (AGI), Stargate is also the inaugural project under its OpenAI for Countries, which is a framework designed to assist governments in building sovereign AI capabilities. 

The deal, which was announced after US President Donald Trump’s visit to the UAE, was developed in close coordination with the US government and backed by a consortium including G42, Oracle, Nvidia, Cisco and SoftBank.

The UAE’s selection as the first Stargate destination is the latest sign of the GCC’s increasingly important role in developing future technologies. The region offers a potentially winning mix of cost-effective energy, robust infrastructure and assertive policy support, positioning it as an emergent global AI and data hub.

Once a niche segment, data centres are now essential infrastructure

To capitalise on these advantages, the region must rapidly expand its data centre capacity. Consultancy firm PwC projects that the Middle East’s capacity could triple from 1GW in 2025 to 3.3GW within five years. 

The forecast underpins a major construction opportunity: as of May, more than $78bn in data centre projects were at the planning stage, according to regional projects tracker MEED Projects. A further $680m were at the bid stage, and another $6.5bn were under construction. Once a niche segment, data centres are now essential infrastructure driving national competitiveness in the AI economy.

The region needs more than just infrastructure to be successful. Realising the region’s AI ambitions – particularly in economic diversification and youth employment – requires parallel progress in capital formation, strategic partnerships and human capital development. 

Long-term success hinges on the ability to transition from infrastructure investment to a thriving tech ecosystem. The speed at which a skilled workforce can be developed will determine whether they become leading players in the AI age or remain dependent on imported expertise.


READ THE JUNE 2025 MEED BUSINESS REVIEW – click here to view PDF

Gulf accelerates AI and data centre strategy; Baghdad keeps up project spending, but fiscal clouds gather; Banking stocks rise despite lower global oil prices

Distributed to senior decision-makers in the region and around the world, the June 2025 edition of MEED Business Review includes:

> GULF PROJECTS INDEX: Gulf projects index leaps 4.3%
To see previous issues of MEED Business Review, please click here
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Colin Foreman
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