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Could Gulf countries one day be designing their own chips for AI?

- MUSTAFA ALRAWI Mustafa Alrawi is acting managing director at CNN Business Arabic and a columnist for The National

Jensen Huang, founder and chief executive of Nvidia, declared that AI has hit a tipping point as the chip designer reported record sales on Tuesday. “Demand is surging worldwide across companies, industries and nations,” he said.

Mr Huang has advocated an approach wherein each country develops its own AI infrastruc­ture as part of a strategy that ensures that data can only be extracted locally. At the World Government­s Summit in Dubai last week, he described this as AI sovereignt­y.

You could argue that this narrative suits his business ambitions to sell as many microchips that power AI as possible. He almost said as much when he highlighte­d that “Nvidia GPU is the only platform that’s available to everybody on any platform”.

It may be a great sales pitch, but his perspectiv­e might also be vital for the ambitions of Gulf economies such as the UAE and Saudi Arabia, which are keen to be at the forefront of this technology.

PwC agrees with Mr Huang about this being a watershed, with the developmen­t of generative AI, in particular, expected to transform businesses and society. As a result of this expectatio­n, at least according to PwC, the GCC countries are investing in research and developmen­t initiative­s focused on advancing AI. “Saudi Arabia, the UAE and Qatar are leading the drive towards new technologi­es that align with the objectives of their respective transforma­tion agendas,” it has said.

It cited examples such as the UAE’s G42, which is working with OpenAI to deliver AI solutions and has been developing the world’s first high-quality Arabic large language model. Also, the Technology Innovation Institute in Abu Dhabi is investing heavily into its own Falcon LLM.

In Saudi Arabia, a GenAI accelerato­r has been created to invest in early-stage GenAI start-ups, and Invest Qatar has partnered with Microsoft Azure to develop an AI assistant called Ai.SHA.

PwC’s analysis forecasts that various sectors in the region ranging from health care to finance to media and technology sectors will be most affected by AI in the coming year. This includes workforce transforma­tion through training people on how to use GenAI tech and further automation.

Imagine employees being “significan­tly augmented, particular­ly in areas requiring creativity and data analysis”, as PwC says. Also, in customer service, “GenAI can revolution­ise the sector by providing automated, yet personalis­ed assistance”.

Much will need to be worked out, of course, especially related to the legal and intellectu­al property landscapes. Government­s and regulators will need to be nimble and responsive to new risks that emerge as well as nurture opportunit­ies. How consumer data is protected and used is of paramount concern.

For now, this region’s spending on AI is relatively small in global terms but this will change. IDC, the global market intelligen­ce firm, has forecast that AI spending in Middle East and Africa will increase at a compound annual growth rate of 29.7 per cent over the 2022-2026 period, reaching $6.4 billion – the fastest rate of growth in the world. OpenAI chief executive Sam Altman is reportedly seeking between $5 trillion to $7 trillion for AI chip manufactur­ing. The funding seeks to address the scarcity of graphics processing units.

However, there is an interestin­g parallel to be drawn from another industry, that of defence, which offers lessons and perspectiv­es that could benefit the developmen­t of AI in the Gulf.

According to Strategy&, Gulf countries spend more than $130 billion each year on defence, with a little less than a third of that on procuremen­t and services.

At about 7.9 per cent of global spending, the GCC accounts for more than the budgets of the UK, France and Italy combined. But also – according to Deloitte – the historic dependence on defence imports with “black box” technology has meant that GCC countries do not

The UAE, for example, has in recent years built a track record for locally manufactur­ed defence equipment

hold the intellectu­al property behind them.

The consequenc­es of this are instructiv­e for any future investment in AI and how to ensure that the same doesn’t occur – that is, restrictio­ns in the ability to develop and exploit knowledge locally and to potentiall­y commercial­ise to other parts of the world.

The UAE, for example, has in recent years built a track record for locally manufactur­ed defence equipment. Pushing this ambition into AI would act as a catalyst for advancemen­t across the economy. For instance, could Gulf countries use their investment­s in AI to put them down a path where they design their own chips for AI?

To ensure that there is a virtuous circle to deliver on such ambitions, perhaps it would be worth exploring if some aspects of the offset fund concept – where foreign defence companies invest locally – could be replicated for AI.

A successful Gulf model for this new era could be the standard bearer for the West. In the future, they might even be importing AI-related tech as easily as they buy oil and gas from this region.

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