Wednesday, June 11, 2025
Analysis: UAE’s massive AI investment could redefine its economic future
تم إعداد هذا المنشور من قبل فيجاي فاليتشا

Vijay Valecha, June 11, 2025, Arabian Business
The United Arab Emirates is betting heavily on artificial intelligence as part of a sweeping economic transformation plan, signing multibillion-dollar technology deals and launching a landmark AI partnership with the United States amid growing global uncertainty.
U.S. President Donald Trump’s visit to Abu Dhabi last month produced more than $200 billion in commercial agreements and a broader $1.4 trillion investment commitment over the next decade, underscoring the UAE’s intent to anchor its non-oil economy in advanced technologies, including AI, semiconductors and cloud computing.
Central to the initiative is the newly announced US-UAE AI Acceleration Partnership, aimed at deepening bilateral cooperation on artificial intelligence and related infrastructure. As part of the effort, the UAE secured a deal to import up to 500,000 Nvidia H100 chips annually, a cornerstone component in generative AI systems.
The Gulf nation also plans to invest in major U.S. AI firms including OpenAI and xAI, while Abu Dhabi-based Group 42 will build a 5-gigawatt AI data centre, set to become the largest of its kind outside the United States.
Diversification drive
The AI push forms part of a broader strategy to diversify the UAE economy away from hydrocarbons. Non-oil sectors accounted for 75 per cent of GDP in the first nine months of 2024, according to the UAE Ministry of Economy, with the non-oil economy expanding 4.5 per cent, outpacing overall GDP growth of 3.8 per cent.
“The UAE’s projected 4.5 per cent growth in 2025 stands in sharp contrast to a global outlook marked by mounting risks and downward revisions,” Osama Al Saifi, Managing Director for MENA at Traze, told Arabian Business.
“This divergence is largely explained by the UAE’s strong performance in non-oil sectors, supported by expansion in tourism, transport, construction, and financial services, as well as sustained momentum in foreign direct investment and trade.”
Resilient markets, undervalued assets
Despite global volatility, UAE financial markets have shown resilience. Dubai Financial Market (DFM) welcomed 19,366 new investors in Q1 2025, of whom 86 per cent were foreign nationals. Trading activity surged, with average daily trading value reaching AED 663 million, up 67 per cent year-on-year, according to Century Financial.
UAE equity valuations also remain below historical averages. The DFMGI index trades at a trailing P/E of 9.5x, about 16.5 per cent below its five-year average, while the ADSMI index is down 16.3 per cent from its historical norm.
Strategic positioning
The UAE’s AI ambitions are not solely economic. Investments in U.S. data infrastructure, semiconductor supply chains, and critical mineral projects are helping strengthen bilateral strategic ties. Abu Dhabi’s $25 billion partnership with Energy Capital Partners, and a $60 billion energy cooperation framework with ExxonMobil and Occidental Petroleum, indicate a multipronged strategy that blends AI leadership with industrial leverage.
PwC estimates the AI sector could contribute over $320 billion to the Middle East economy by 2030, with the UAE positioned to capture the lion’s share through early infrastructure deployment, regulatory reform and foreign investment attraction.
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