Oracle Corp (ORCL) is making a big bet on Abu Dhabi's AI future, expanding its cloud region with the Middle East's first supercluster powered by Nvidia Corp (NVDA) Blackwell graphics processing units. Think of it as dropping a supercomputer into the desert, designed specifically to help the region build AI on its own terms.
The new Oracle Cloud Infrastructure Supercluster packs more than 4,000 Blackwell GPUs, delivering the kind of horsepower needed for serious AI training, inference work, and research. This isn't just about raw computing power—it's about sovereign AI, letting governments and organizations keep their data local while still accessing cutting-edge technology.
Why Abu Dhabi Cares About Sovereign AI
Here's where things get interesting. Abu Dhabi has set a wildly ambitious target: becoming the world's first fully AI-native government by 2027. That's only a couple years away, and they're putting serious infrastructure behind the goal. The Oracle-Nvidia partnership helps organizations across smart government, energy, financial services, healthcare, logistics, aviation, and telecom sectors accelerate AI adoption while meeting strict data sovereignty and regulatory requirements.
Marc Domenech, Nvidia's senior regional director for Enterprise META, framed it as building an "AI Factory" where nations can innovate locally while keeping complete control over their data. It's computing power that stays put.
Oracle's distributed cloud approach gives customers full control over where data lives, how fast it moves, and who governs it—all while accessing the same 200-plus AI and cloud services available in Oracle's public cloud, at the same pricing.
The Bigger Middle East AI Picture
This Abu Dhabi announcement comes as the U.S. recently approved shipments of advanced AI chips to Saudi Arabia, opening the floodgates for regional expansion. Nvidia is riding this wave hard, strengthening its presence through an expanded partnership with Saudi Arabia's HUMAIN.
HUMAIN's plans are eye-popping: deploying up to 600,000 Nvidia AI systems over the next three years, including GB300 platforms. The company is building Nvidia-powered data centers in Saudi Arabia and expanding into the U.S., using Nvidia Nemotron and Omniverse technologies for Arabic-language AI development and physical AI projects. They've also partnered with Global AI to develop U.S. compute infrastructure connected by Nvidia Quantum-X800 InfiniBand networking.
In partnership with xAI, HUMAIN has started constructing a network of large-scale data centers in Saudi Arabia. The flagship site is a 500 MW facility that will host approximately 18,000 GB300 GPUs—computing power destined to train future versions of Grok models.
HUMAIN isn't putting all its eggs in one basket, either. The company deepened its collaboration with Amazon.com Inc (AMZN) Web Services to deploy and manage up to 150,000 AI accelerators in a dedicated AI Zone in Riyadh, positioning AWS as its preferred AI partner.
What It Means For Oracle
Despite the big Middle East news, Oracle stock was down 6.79% at $186.89 on Tuesday, suggesting investors are focused on other factors beyond regional cloud expansion.
The real story here is about a fundamental shift in how governments think about technology infrastructure. Sovereign AI isn't just a buzzword—it's becoming a strategic priority for nations that want the benefits of artificial intelligence without shipping their most sensitive data overseas. Oracle and Nvidia are positioning themselves as the partners who can make that happen.