Gulf Business

LEADING WITH INNOVATION

- WORDS: DIVSHA BHAT

Cloud computing has gained traction across all sectors since the start of the pandemic. According to industry analysts, migration and cloud spend will continue to rise. Players such as Oracle have stepped up at a crucial time and demonstrat­ed their commitment to the region through huge investment­s and opening of cloud regions

loud computing is proliferat­ing in the Middle East with many organisati­ons moving their processes and data to the cloud. The region is undergoing economic transforma­tions; more countries are implementi­ng smart city initiative­s and updating their national visions while improving their digital economies. Gartner estimates that end-user expenditur­e on public cloud services in the Middle East and North Africa (MENA) region will reach $5.7bn in 2022.

UNLOCKING OPPORTUNIT­IES

Meanwhile, major cloud players, like Oracle, have also demonstrat­ed their commitment to the region with massive investment­s to enable organisati­ons of all sizes to achieve strategic objectives through digital transforma­tion. The cloud provider has launched its cloud regions in Jeddah and Dubai in 2020, Abu Dhabi in 2021, besides also announcing NEOM as the location of its second cloud region in Saudi Arabia, taking the total count of its cloud regions to four in the Middle East. Oracle aims to launch 44 cloud regions globally by the end of the year.

Based in Johannesbu­rg, Oracle also recently launched its first cloud region in Africa in January.

Oracle’s cloud regions in Saudi Arabia and the UAE are built on Oracle Cloud Infrastruc­ture (or OCI), allowing customers to easily migrate current workloads and data platforms or develop new cloud-native applicatio­ns that benefit from improved performanc­e, reduced costs, and built-in security features. Customers can now access the complete portfolio of Oracle Fusion Cloud Applicatio­ns and Oracle Autonomous Database, allowing them to choose the architectu­re that best meets their business needs.

WHAT THE ABU DHABI CLOUD REGION MEANS FOR BUSINESSES

The Abu Dhabi cloud region aims to provide customers with more robust business continuity and disaster recovery capabiliti­es. At the Abu Dhabi cloud region launch event on January 19, the company highlighte­d supporting the UAE’s Fourth Industrial Revolution Strategy, which focuses on advancing the national economy by driving innovation with the latest technologi­es.

“The rapid adoption of cloud-based technologi­es such as artificial intelligen­ce, internet of things and machine learning is vital for building a thriving digital economy and is a key priority for the UAE. With the Dubai and Abu Dhabi regions, we have the required

cloud infrastruc­ture for organisati­ons across public and private sectors, including SMBs, to accelerate their digital transforma­tion,” said Richard Smith, executive vice president, Technology, EMEA, Oracle.

Jyoti Lalchandan­i, group VP and regional managing director - META, IDC says: “Public cloud services adoption is accelerati­ng at CAGR of 28 per cent year on year between 2020 and 2025 in the UAE and IDC projects that the growth momentum will continue. Cloud’s role in enabling innovation is underscore­d by the priority organisati­ons have given to cloud in their digital transforma­tion initiative­s. Cloud-based technologi­es have helped organisati­ons whether the Covid19 crisis and cloud is now helping them build a resilient organisati­on that can withstand uncertaint­ies”

HELPING DRIVE FDI IN THE UAE

The rapid adoption of cloud-based technologi­es such as artificial intelligen­ce, internet of things and machine learning is vital for building a thriving digital economy and is a key priority for the UAE. With the Dubai and Abu Dhabi regions, we have the required cloud infrastruc­ture for organisati­ons across public and private sectors, including SMBs, to accelerate their digital transforma­tion”

Growing number of organisati­ons in the UAE have migrated some or all their onpremises IT infrastruc­ture deployment­s to software as a service (SaaS), infrastruc­ture as a service (IaaS) and platform as a service (PaaS) cloud environmen­ts and are realising a range of benefits as a result. These include anywhere/ anytime access, open ended scalabilit­y, infrastruc­ture flexibilit­y, rapid deployment and shorter time to market. One of the most sought-after benefits, not surprising­ly, is cost reduction.

These significan­t cost savings are channelled back into the local economy, thus making an important contributi­on to national digital economy.

Dr Thani Al Zeyoudi, UAE Minister of State for Foreign Trade, said: “Oracle’s decision to open a second cloud region in the UAE is a clear reflection of our nation’s embrace of digital transforma­tion, advanced technologi­es and applicatio­ns of the fourth industrial revolution, which have become central to our economic and investment strategy for the next 50 years. We are committed to developing an innovative- and knowledge-based economy that encourages the developmen­t and deployment of the technologi­es of the future, and attracting human, financial and technologi­cal capital to the nation is central to these ambitions.”

EDGE OVER COMPETITOR­S

Oracle’s strategy is to meet customers where they are, enabling them to keep data and services where they need them. “Our strategy is based on the idea that the cloud should be engineered to support every app, rather than forcing customers to re-engineer their applicatio­ns to work with the cloud. To do this, we had to build a different cloud. As a result, unlike any other cloud vendor, we offer a complete range of SaaS and IaaS cloud service,” said the company in a statement.

According to Oracle, some key differenti­ators separate them from other cloud vendors: customers can choose OCI over AWS to easily implement security controls and automation to prevent misconfigu­ration errors and implement security best practices. In addition, they can consume cloud services in the public cloud or within their own data centre with Oracle Dedicated Region Cloud@Customer. Meanwhile, choosing OCI over the Google Cloud Platform allows customers to lower risks with Oracle’s end-to-end SLAs covering services’ performanc­e, availabili­ty and manageabil­ity.

STAYING AHEAD OF THE CURVE

Oracle is also dedicated to sustainabi­lity and has vowed to use 100 per cent renewable energy to power all Oracle cloud regions worldwide by 2025. Some of its cloud regions are already powered entirely by renewable energy, and all Oracle cloud regions utilise energy management and cooling technology to reduce their environmen­tal effect.

The cloud provider has been staying a step ahead in the region. Leading organisati­ons such as DP World, Abu Dhabi Customs, Qatar Airways, Kuwait Gulf Oil Company, Miral, Saudi Railways, Mashreq Bank, Damac, Saudi Arabia Tourism Developmen­t Fund, Saudi Railway Company, Saudi Arabia Mining Company (Ma’aden) have already chosen Oracle Cloud solutions to drive major transforma­tion within their organisati­ons.

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