The National - News

Cloud’s silver lining to create nearly 32,000 UAE jobs

- ALKESH SHARMA

After a slow start, cloud adoption will be in full swing in the Middle East and North Africa in 2019 with the UAE at the forefront, with 31,650 new jobs expected between 2017 and 2022.

“The region has dramatical­ly increased its adoption of cloud technology – a direct consequenc­e of the nations diversifyi­ng their economies,” said Jeroen Schlosser, managing director at Equinix Mena. “We see a clear strengthen­ing of Dubai as a regional hub [for cloud adoption].”

The UAE is the region’s most active adopter of cloud computing. Internatio­nal Data Corporatio­n, based in Massachuse­tts, predicts spending on public cloud services in the Emirates will almost quadruple over the next four years, from Dh439 million in 2017 to Dh1.51bn in 2022.

The emergence of cloud computing will have a powerful effect on tech capabiliti­es in the region, according to experts.

“The cloud will enable innovative projects that revolve around artificial intelligen­ce, enterprise mobility, Internet of Things and blockchain,” said Megha Kumar, research director at IDC.

Cloud services will also create demand for new skill types and expertise in the market, said Ms Kumar. He said these woiu range from AI and blockchain architects and data scientists to AI systems trainers. As more companies are using cloudbased solutions in Mena, global tech players are teaming up with local firms to get in on the burgeoning service.

Last year, California tech company Equinix announced a joint venture with Omani telco Omantel to develop a data centre in Muscat where carriers, content and cloud providers and can house their IT infrastruc­ture.

Microsoft has announced cloud data centres in Abu Dhabi and Dubai and Amazon Web Services will be opening at least three centres in Bahrain to serve Middle East and Africa customers.

Comparativ­ely smaller players such as Alibaba Cloud, the cloud computing arm of Chinese e-commerce group Alibaba, opened its first data centre in Dubai in November 2016 and plans to open its second in the coming months.

“If we take a more detailed look at how the design of today’s interconne­cted IT is evolving, then there is a need to build a regional hub for data sets and applicatio­ns,” said Mr Schlosser.

Dubai Airports uses Microsoft’s Azure cloud service for the Wi-Fi it offers to travellers. Azure has a 16 per cent share of the global cloud infrastruc­ture market. This makes Microsoft the second-biggest provider of cloud services after Amazon’s Web Services, according to researcher Canalys.

The emergence of cloud computing will have a powerful effect on tech capabiliti­es in the region, according to experts

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