Saudi Arabia Will Be An AI Powerhouse, Says Former Google Chief
He spoke hours before Google Cloud announced a major partnership with Saudi Arabia’s PIF to establish state-of-the-art infrastructure in the country’s eastern province of Dammam.
Saudi Arabia is positioned to be one of AI’s global leaders given its combination of capital, natural resources, and governance, according to Google’s former chairman and chief executive. “Saudi in particular can become one of the winners, one of the big winners here (in AI) if the country puts the money that's in place now wisely and quickly,” said Eric Schmidt on Wednesday.
“There are discussions within the government here about how to do that,” said the former Google head, who shared his views with attendees at the eighth edition of the Future Investment Initiative summit in Riyadh. He added that he was familiar with the discussions and “they look roughly right to me.”
He spoke hours before Google Cloud announced a major partnership with Saudi Arabia’s sovereign wealth fund, the PIF, to establish state-of-the-art infrastructure in the country’s eastern province of Dammam. It is hoped the AI hub will generate thousands of jobs that would add an estimated $71 billion to the kingdom’s gross domestic product over the next eight years.
This is an expansion of Google Cloud’s November 2023 launch in Dammam and expansion of data sovereignty and security services in August of this year. Schmidt said the simplest way the kingdom could achieve AI leadership is by using its abundant resources and creating facilities that “no one else can build.”
Large pools of capital and energy are needed to build data centres – the foundation of advanced AI – which he said “Saudi Arabia is capable of doing” compared to its global competitors. “There is a huge shortage of electricity in the developed world. One estimate is that the US will run out of electricity for this kind of stuff by 2028,” he said.
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