Saudi Arabia Seeks to Host the World’s Most Cost-Competitive Data Centres
The Kingdom unveils an ambitious strategy to attract global cloud and artificial intelligence infrastructure with ultra-low operational costs and vast capacity expansion
Saudi Arabia has intensified its drive to become a preeminent global hub for digital infrastructure by positioning itself as the host of the world’s most cost-effective data centres.
The initiative forms a central pillar of the Kingdom’s broader Vision 2030 economic diversification agenda, with state institutions and private partners mobilising substantial capital, regulatory reforms and strategic incentives to lure hyperscale cloud operators, enterprise platforms and AI compute facilities.
This push reflects the rising global demand for data-intensive services including artificial intelligence, cloud computing and digital commerce, and Saudi leaders see an opportunity to leverage abundant energy resources, low land costs and strategic geography linking Europe, Asia and Africa to undercut traditional data-centre hubs in North America and Western Europe.
The Saudi Data and Artificial Intelligence Authority and the Ministry of Communications and Information Technology have articulated an overarching National Data Centre Strategy that envisages building up to one and a half gigawatts of commissioned capacity by 2030. Policymakers have introduced favourable regulatory regimes, including the Cloud Computing Regulatory Framework and special data centre economic zones with streamlined permitting and tax incentives, aimed at reducing barriers for foreign and domestic investors while ensuring security and data governance standards align with international expectations.
Major global technology firms are responding to the Kingdom’s call.
Regional and international players such as Amazon Web Services, Microsoft and Oracle have announced multi-billion-dollar projects to establish cloud regions and hyperscale data campuses in Saudi Arabia.
A recent industry database identifies more than thirty existing facilities with dozens more in advanced development, extending from Riyadh and Jeddah to the Red Sea’s NEOM megaproject.
Local conglomerates and sovereign-backed ventures are also planning cutting-edge facilities, including AI-centric campuses with renewable power integration and advanced cooling solutions tailored to the harsh desert climate.
The Kingdom’s cost-competitive proposition is rooted in several structural advantages: electricity tariffs significantly below global averages, affordable industrial land, expansive subsea and terrestrial connectivity and a regulatory environment designed to facilitate rapid deployment and scale.
Industry research underscores how these factors can materially reduce total cost of ownership for data centre operators vis-à-vis established markets.
Saudi Arabia’s geographic position also enhances latency-sensitive services across continents.
Beyond attracting international cloud and hyperscale clients, Saudi officials see the data-centre build-out as a catalyst for broader technological and economic transformation.
The expanded digital backbone is expected to underpin national AI initiatives, public-sector digital services, fintech growth and private-sector innovation, while nurturing a skilled domestic workforce in high-tech engineering and operations.
As capital flows and project pipelines deepen, the Kingdom is positioning itself not merely as a regional leader but as a competitive node in the global digital economy, challenging established hyperscale markets and reshaping data infrastructure geography for the decade ahead.