- The United Arab Emirates has confirmed the Stargate UAE AI data centre will cost more than $30 billion and span 19.2 sq km in Abu Dhabi.
- The scale and sovereign backing of the project mark the Middle East’s entry into the global “mega compute” race, with the first phase due in Q3 2026.
What happened: UAE expands Stargate AI data centre into unprecedented compute campus
On 27 January, at the Machines Can Think summit in Abu Dhabi, Omar Al Olama, the UAE’s Minister of State for Artificial Intelligence, Digital Economy and Remote Work Applications, revealed that the Stargate UAE artificial intelligence data centre project will exceed $30 billion in investment — significantly above earlier projections. The facility is being developed in partnership with Khazna Data Centres, a unit of AI group G42, and supported by major technology companies including OpenAI, Oracle, Nvidia, Cisco and SoftBank.
The campus, designed to host 5 gigawatts of computing capacity and span 19.2 square kilometres — more than nine times the size of Monaco — is positioned as a cornerstone of the UAE’s strategy to provide the advanced compute power necessary for training and deploying frontier generative AI models. Stargate UAE’s first phase is expected to be completed in the third quarter of 2026.
Al Olama characterised the project as evidence of the Emirates’ ability to build infrastructure on a scale few nations have attempted, emphasising its role in supporting data sovereignty and sovereign AI capabilities. He noted that Emirati large language models such as Jais and K2 Think have already delivered economic value and that Stargate will offer other countries sovereign alternatives for AI development.
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Why it’s important
For technology companies and investors tracking global AI infrastructure, the Stargate UAE announcement is a structural milestone: it represents sovereign capital moving decisively into mega-scale compute build-outs. With a price tag exceeding $30 billion, vast physical footprint and backing from both government and global tech partners, Stargate marks a shift in how nations are approaching AI infrastructure — not merely as cloud or data centre extensions, but as strategic, sovereign compute hubs.
This holds particular significance for cloud providers, GPU and silicon vendors, systems integrators and AI platform developers. Projects of this scale reshape supply chains for high-performance computing, create demand for long-term GPU capacity agreements and elevate sovereign compute as a competitive lever in the global AI arms race. They also signal that compute power — traditionally concentrated in North America, Europe and East Asia — is becoming geographically broader, with the Middle East emerging as a major new node in the global AI infrastructure topology.
In a market where both capacity and data governance are increasingly strategic, Stargate establishes a new benchmark for sovereign compute investment that could inspire similar initiatives elsewhere.
