| Saudi Arabia’s HUMAIN sharpens AI playbook 
 
  Manal Albarakati
 
 Updated Oct 29, 2025, 5:36am EDT
 
 Gulf
 
 
  Courtesy of the Future Investment Initiative 
 
  The News The  scale of Saudi Arabia’s artificial intelligence ambitions came into  sharp focus at the Future Investment Initiative (FII) in Riyadh. Public  Investment Fund–backed HUMAIN, which is less than six months old, is  striking deals with some of the biggest names in energy, finance, and  technology — part of a sweeping plan to position the kingdom as the  third-largest AI infrastructure provider, after the US and China.
 
 Aramco  will become a “significant” minority shareholder, and the world’s  biggest oil exporter will contribute its “AI assets, capabilities and  talent into HUMAIN,” the company said in a statement. HUMAIN signed a $3  billion agreement with AirTrunk, backed by Blackstone, to build a  large-scale data center campus in Saudi Arabia. And California’s  Qualcomm Technologies, which plans to manufacture an AI chip to rival  market-leader Nvidia, chose HUMAIN as its first customer.
 
 The  company is also planning to IPO: “In three to four years, this company  needs to be listed,” said CEO Tareq Amin, and will consider floating  shares in Saudi Arabia and the US.
 
 
  Know More HUMAIN  was created this year to consolidate and accelerate Saudi Arabia’s AI  investments and position the kingdom as a hub for computing power. It  aims to have six gigawatts of computing capacity by 2034. “What we can  offer is simple: abundant land, cheap and reliable energy, and strong  connectivity,” Amin said at FII on Tuesday.
 
 The  flurry of deals comes amid increasing investment in the Gulf, and  globally, to build out the infrastructure that will drive AI  applications. HUMAIN is investing broadly, forging crucial partnerships  with suppliers, rolling out homegrown software and hardware, and  pitching global firms with the promise of cheaper and faster computing  power.
 
 HUMAIN plans to deploy 200 megawatts worth of the AI200 and  AI250 chips in data centers in the kingdom by next year, Qualcomm said  in a statement. The chips will primarily be used for inferencing, a kind  of querying of a large language model so a chatbot can generate an  answer. The company is also in talks with AWS and Google, Amin said, and  is looking to attract early-stage AI startups to Riyadh, with  incentives like access to data centers and free tools, like a new work  management software platform it introduced this week, called HUMAIN One.
 
 In  May, during US President Donald Trump’s visit to Riyadh, HUMAIN  announced a partnership with Nvidia to deploy 500 megawatts of power  with hundreds of thousands of GPUs powered by Nvidia’s Grace Blackwell  chips, its most advanced,  The Wall Street Journal reported. The Trump administration has not yet publicly greenlit those exports.
 
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