Ooredoo Qatar is Qatar's leading digital infrastructure operator, controlling last-mile networks, three million customers, five data centers, a sovereign AI cloud, and the Doha IX internet exchange. Public evidence confirms its regulated status and strategic role, but internal abuse workflows, private peering contracts, and traffic volumes remain opaque. Watchpoints: CRA spectrum shift, IX governance, cloud expansion, registry record changes.
Ooredoo Qatar provides public mobile, fixed, fibre, and enterprise connectivity services under licenses from Qatar's Communications Regulatory Authority. The company also hosts data center, cloud, and interconnection services, and operates Doha IX—Qatar's first commercial internet exchange—connecting local networks to Marseille and Frankfurt. It is the leading communications company in the country, with a large consumer and enterprise base.
If Ooredoo Qatar's abuse contact were altered or its routing records misconfigured, incident reports for its resources could go unanswered, raising security risk. More broadly, changes in its network, data centre, cloud, or IX operations affect latency, resilience, and dependency for consumers, businesses, and government. Regulatory decisions on spectrum or licensing could reshape access terms and network performance, with ripple effects through Qatar's digital infrastructure.
Several public sources
Ooredoo Qatar
Ooredoo Qatar, part of the Ooredoo Group, is the dominant telecommunications and digital infrastructure provider in Qatar. It operates licensed mobile and fixed networks serving nearly 3 million customers, five data centers covering 60,000 square feet, a sovereign AI cloud built on NVIDIA GPUs, and the Doha IX internet exchange in partnership with DE-CIX.
Its infrastructure is a critical national dependency, and any regulatory shift, operational change, or routing misconfiguration could affect connectivity, cloud resilience, and digital service delivery across Qatar.
Why It Matters
If Ooredoo Qatar's abuse contact were altered or its routing records misconfigured, incident reports for its resources could go unanswered, raising security risk. More broadly, changes in its network, data centre, cloud, or IX operations affect latency, resilience, and dependency for consumers, businesses, and government. Regulatory decisions on spectrum or licensing could reshape access terms and network performance, with ripple effects through Qatar's digital infrastructure.
What Public Sources Show
Ooredoo Qatar is Qatar’s dominant telecommunications and digital infrastructure operator. It holds fixed and mobile licenses from the Communications Regulatory Authority (CRA) and serves nearly three million customers. The company’s infrastructure includes national access networks, five data centres, a sovereign AI cloud, and Doha IX—Qatar’s first commercial internet exchange, launched in partnership with DE‑CIX. This concentration makes Ooredoo a critical dependency for the country’s digital economy.
Ooredoo’s operating scale is significant. Its 2025 annual report lists 2.979 million customers, QR7.239 billion revenue, and 1,047 employees in Qatar. The company offers consumer mobile, broadband, fibre, and entertainment services, as well as enterprise connectivity, IP VPN, and wholesale interconnection. Its five data centre facilities, covering about 60,000 square feet, provide colocation, cloud, managed storage, backup, disaster recovery, and security services.
Doha IX, announced in September 2025 and connected to DE‑CIX Marseille in April 2026, positions Ooredoo at the centre of Qatar’s internet interconnection. The route‑server fabric enables local and international networks to exchange traffic with lower latency, and extends reach to nearly 1,100 networks via Frankfurt. This makes the exchange a chokepoint for regional data flows and increases Ooredoo’s influence over interconnection economics.
The company’s control surface extends to RIPE registry records. The autonomous system AS211942, used for Doha IX route servers, is registered to Ooredoo Q.S.C. with an abuse contact handle OQAA1‑RIPE—misspelled in the reference as “OOREDOO Qatar Abuse Acoount.” Any change to this handle or to routing announcements could disrupt incident reporting and routing visibility for the exchange.
Regulatory exposure is material. The CRA’s September 2024 decision ordering a 2.6 GHz band migration shows how spectrum and licensing decisions can immediately alter Ooredoo’s operating parameters. Further CRA actions on tariffs, quality‑of‑service, or interconnection obligations could reshape the digital service landscape for millions of users.
Public evidence does not disclose private peering contracts, internal abuse‑handling procedures, or detailed traffic volumes at Doha IX. The company’s 2025 annual report provides top‑line operating metrics, but customer‑specific dependencies remain opaque. The AI cloud and data centre expansions increase critical‑infrastructure concentration, yet public sources do not identify key tenants or workload profiles.
Watchpoints include regulatory shifts from the CRA, governance changes at Doha IX, modifications to RIPE abuse contacts or AS211942 routing records, and any scaling of sovereign cloud capacity. Each of these signals could alter Qatar’s digital risk surface and warrants active monitoring.
Operating Surface
Ooredoo Qatar provides public mobile, fixed, fibre, and enterprise connectivity services under licenses from Qatar's Communications Regulatory Authority. The company also hosts data center, cloud, and interconnection services, and operates Doha IX—Qatar's first commercial internet exchange—connecting local networks to Marseille and Frankfurt. It is the leading communications company in the country, with a large consumer and enterprise base.
Ooredoo Qatar is a single point of dependency for almost three million customers and numerous enterprises. Its control over last-mile networks, data centers, AI cloud, and the Doha IX exchange means that any operational failure, regulatory change, or misconfiguration can cascade across Qatar's digital economy. Monitoring the company's registry records, IX participation, and regulatory posture provides early warning of shifts in national internet resilience.
Watchpoints
Ooredoo Qatar’s position as the dominant communications infrastructure provider makes it a critical node in Qatar’s digital economy. Its control over last-mile access, data center capacity, AI cloud, and the national internet exchange creates significant dependency. Regulatory decisions by the CRA can reshape this control surface quickly. The misspelled abuse contact in RIPE records is a minor but persistent administrative risk that could impede incident response.
For BTW tracking, shifts in IX governance, cloud expansion, and spectrum licensing are leading indicators of infrastructure risk.
Concrete observable watchpoints include: CRA decisions on spectrum or tariffs; changes in Doha IX connected networks or DE-CIX governance changes; updates to OQAA1-RIPE handle in RIPE; new prefix announcements from AS8781 or AS211942; official announcements of new data-center or cloud capacity; and any public reports of service degradation or regulatory violation.
Specific public-evidence gaps include: internal abuse-handling processes, private peering contracts, full Doha IX entity list, traffic volumes, and commercial terms of cloud services. Public sources do not reveal the internal routing policy or disaster-recovery coordination. To strengthen the profile, a direct company statement on abuse response, an updated registry record, or a regulatory filing detailing infrastructure commitments would be valuable.
Sources
- Registry RDAP / WHOIS record - public-source identity and registry context for OOREDOO Qatar Abuse Acoount.
- bgp.tools - BGP.tools shows AS211942 as Ooredoo Q.S.C., registered in RIPE, with organisation ORG-QT1-RIPE and abuse-c OQAA1-RIPE; it also reports the ASN is not currently in the global routing table.
- PeeringDB network profile - PeeringDB lists AS211942 as Doha IX Route Servers, under Ooredoo Qatar formerly Qatar Telecom, with network type Route Server and IRR route-set RIPE::AS211942:AS-DOHAIX.
- PeeringDB network profile - PeeringDB's organisation page identifies Ooredoo Qatar formerly Qatar Telecom, links to ooredoo.qa, and lists networks including Ooredoo Qatar AS8781, Doha IX Route Servers AS211942 and Doha IX MAPS Route Servers AS215791.
- ooredoo.qa - Ooredoo Qatar's About Us page describes Ooredoo as a leading international communications company and says that in Qatar it is the leading communications company serving consumers, businesses, residences and organisations.
- ooredoo.com - Ooredoo's 2025 annual report describes the group as a telecommunications and digital infrastructure provider and lists Qatar operating metrics including 2.979 million customers, QR 7.239 billion revenue, QR 3.755 billion EBITDA and 1,047 employees in 2025.
- ooredoo.qa - Ooredoo Qatar's regulatory page states that its public telecommunications services are governed by fixed and mobile licenses under Qatar Law No. 34 of 2006 and lists approved consumer, business, wholesale and interconnection documentation.
- ooredoo.qa - Ooredoo Qatar's data-centre page says Qatar Data Centres comprise five facilities covering about 60,000 square feet and providing hosting, co-location, managed services, cloud, backup, disaster recovery, connectivity and security services.
- ooredoo.qa - Ooredoo announced on September 30, 2025 that it launched Doha IX with DE-CIX as Qatar's first commercial Internet Exchange Point, hosted in Ooredoo's data centre and built for interconnection among hyperscalers, cloud providers, content networks and ISPs.
- ooredoo.qa - Ooredoo announced on April 15, 2026 that Doha IX was directly connected to DE-CIX Marseille, enabling connected networks to exchange with almost 120 networks in Marseille and remotely with almost 1,100 networks connected to DE-CIX Frankfurt.
- cra.gov.qa - Qatar's Communications Regulatory Authority named Ooredoo Qatar Q.P.S.C. and Vodafone Qatar P.Q.S.C. as mobile service providers in a September 1, 2024 decision ordering migration of the 2.6 GHz band to TDD by March 31, 2025.
- ooredoo.qa - Ooredoo announced on July 1, 2025 that it launched sovereign AI cloud services in Qatar, built on NVIDIA Hopper GPUs and hosted in local data centres.
Signal Brief
- Signal: Ooredoo Qatar
- Region:
- Market Class: Europe and Middle East Cloud Services Trends
Operating Footprint
- public operating records
- official service pages
- documented relationships updates
Market Context
- If Ooredoo Qatar's abuse contact were altered or its routing records misconfigured, incident reports for its resources could go unanswered, raising security risk. More broadly, changes in its network, data centre, cloud, or IX operations affect latency, resilience, and dependency for consumers, businesses, and government. Regulatory decisions on spectrum or licensing could reshape access terms and network performance, with ripple effects through Qatar's digital infrastructure.
- Operational relevance: Medium
- Time Horizon: Next quarter
What To Watch
- official company sources
- public registries
- operator-published records
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