Nvidia Corp. (NVDA) keeps finding new ways to ride the AI wave, and its latest partnership might be one of the biggest yet. HUMAIN, the AI initiative backed by Saudi Arabia's Public Investment Fund, just announced an ambitious expansion of its relationship with Nvidia that involves deploying up to 600,000 of the chipmaker's latest AI systems over the next three years.
To put that number in perspective: HUMAIN is planning one of the largest concentrations of AI computing power anywhere in the world, spanning both Saudi Arabia and the United States. The deployment will include Nvidia's GB300 platforms, representing the company's most advanced technology, as HUMAIN scales what it calls "full-stack" AI capabilities.
Arabic AI Goes Mainstream
Here's where it gets interesting from a broader market perspective. HUMAIN isn't just building generic data centers. The company plans to use Nvidia Nemotron open technologies to train HUMAIN Chat, an AI system designed specifically for Arabic speakers. That's a market of more than 400 million people who've been largely underserved by English-centric AI models.
The infrastructure buildout spans multiple fronts. HUMAIN is constructing Nvidia-powered data centers in Saudi Arabia while simultaneously expanding into the U.S. with new facilities engineered for high-density compute and advanced model workloads. The company will also tap Nvidia Omniverse libraries to accelerate what it calls "physical AI initiatives."
Partnerships Stack Up Fast
HUMAIN formed a strategic partnership with Global AI to develop U.S.-based AI compute capacity, featuring GB300 clusters connected through Nvidia Quantum-X800 InfiniBand networking. The new U.S. campus will support large-scale model development, secure inference operations, and sovereign-cloud integration for both enterprise and government customers.
Then there's the xAI angle. HUMAIN and Elon Musk's AI company are building a network of large-scale data centers in Saudi Arabia, starting with a flagship deployment exceeding 500 megawatts. The facility will host approximately 18,000 GB300 GPUs specifically to support training of future Grok models, extending xAI's global supercomputing footprint well beyond U.S. borders.
AWS Joins The Party
HUMAIN also expanded its collaboration with Amazon.com Inc.'s (AMZN) Amazon Web Services to deploy and manage up to 150,000 AI accelerators. The mix includes Nvidia's latest GB300s infrastructure and AWS's own Trainium chips, all housed within a dedicated "AI Zone" in Riyadh.
Under the expanded partnership, AWS becomes HUMAIN's preferred AI partner globally. The two companies will collaborate to bring AI compute and services from Saudi Arabia to customers worldwide, essentially positioning the kingdom as a major AI export hub rather than just a consumer of Western technology.
Washington Gives The Green Light
The timing here matters. Major U.S. chipmakers like Nvidia (NVDA) and Advanced Micro Devices, Inc. (AMD) stand to gain significant momentum as Washington prepares to approve the first shipments of advanced AI chips to HUMAIN. This represents a notable shift in U.S. export policy and follows Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman's meeting with President Donald Trump.
The expected authorization supports a broader U.S.-Saudi AI cooperation pact that could reshape how American tech companies access Middle Eastern markets. Backed by the country's $1 trillion Public Investment Fund, HUMAIN plans to deploy up to 400,000 AI chips by 2030 and invest approximately $50 billion to scale data centers and national computing capacity.
For Nvidia, which continues to dominate the AI chip market, these deals represent exactly the kind of large-scale, long-term commitments that justify its massive valuation. The company's stock traded higher by 4.86% to $195.59 in premarket trading Thursday, reflecting investor confidence in its ability to capture demand from every corner of the AI buildout, including emerging markets that are hungry for sovereign AI capabilities.
The broader story is about AI infrastructure going genuinely global. Saudi Arabia isn't just buying chips; it's building the computational foundation for Arabic-language AI that could serve hundreds of millions of users while simultaneously positioning itself as a compute provider for Western companies like xAI. That's a more sophisticated play than simply importing technology, and it's one that American chipmakers are clearly eager to support.