Saudi AI Firm Humain Unveils 6 Gigawatt Data Centre Plan and New AI Operating System
- On Monday, Saudi-based AI startup Humain said it will launch Humain 1 this week, a speech-driven OS that CEO Tareq Amin described as 'Now you speak your intent' at the Fortune Global Forum in Riyadh.
- Launched in May under the Public Investment Fund and chaired by Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, Humain is part of Vision 2030 to diversify Saudi Arabia's economy beyond oil.
- Tareq Amin said on Monday Humain plans to build approximately 6 gigawatts of data centre capacity and will locate centres where energy is underutilized, moving computation to Saudi Arabia and sending results back.
- Jonathan Ross, CEO of Groq, said Saudi Arabia can become a net exporter of data due to its energy surplus and is primed for AI infrastructure while Humain aims to be the first to officially launch its system amid regional deals.
- The Middle East's surplus energy and cheap data movement make it attractive for AI compute, and a Humain spokesperson said development began shortly after its May launch with internal payroll and human resources systems testing.
49 Articles
49 Articles
Saudi Arabia is directing its oil wealth towards its enormous ambitions in artificial intelligence.
Saudi Arabia is making a massive bet on becoming a global AI powerhouse
Humain is setting out to make Saudi Arabia the world’s third-largest AI market, after the United States and China. It’s a bold ambition for a newcomer to the industry, but its CEO argues the Kingdom’s competitive edge lies in its abundant and cheap energy resources that can feed the seemingly insatiable demand for computing power.
AI sovereignty for Saudi success
This week, all eyes were on Saudi Arabia as Riyadh hosted the 9th Future Investment Initiative, a gathering of the world’s most influential investors, policymakers, and innovators. The conversations shaping the future of the global economy were happening there, and the topic that dominated every panel and private discussion was AI infrastructure. From boardrooms to ministries,
For three days, nearly twenty leaders met in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, to participate in the ninth edition of the Future Investment Initiative (FII), including Syrian interim president Ahmad al Chareh and Chinese vice president Han Zheng, along with several ministers and more than 150 representatives of the private sector. Created in 2017 this forum has become a showcase for the ambitious Vision 2030 reform agenda, with which Saudi Arabia seeks to r…
Coverage Details
Bias Distribution
- 52% of the sources are Center
Factuality
To view factuality data please Upgrade to Premium

























