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Global cloud spending to reach $495bn this year, Gartner says

- Alkesh Sharma

Global spending on public cloud services is expected to rise 20.4 per cent annually to $495 billion this year, as businesses expedite the pace of their digital transforma­tion in the post-Covid era, US researcher Gartner has said.

Total spending is nearly $84bn more than the 2020 figures and is expected to surge nearly 21.3 per cent yearly to almost $600bn next year.

“Cloud is the powerhouse that drives today’s digital organisati­ons,” said Sid Nag, research vice president at Gartner.

“CIOs [chief informatio­n officers] are beyond the era of irrational exuberance of procuring cloud services and are being thoughtful in their choice of public cloud providers to drive specific, desired business and technology outcomes in their digital transforma­tion journey.”

For businesses, moving to a cloud system hosted by a specialise­d company – such as Oracle, Amazon Web Services or SAP – is more economical than creating their own infrastruc­ture of servers, hardware and security networks, industry experts said.

In overall cloud spending, infrastruc­ture-as-a-service software is forecast to experience the highest end-user spending growth this year at 30.6 per cent. It will be followed by desktop-as-aservice at 26.6 per cent and platform-as-a-service at 26.1 per cent, Gartner predicted.

In cloud industry, businesses pay only for those services or resources that they use.

The new reality of hybrid work is prompting organisati­ons to “move away from powering their workforce with traditiona­l client computing solutions, such as desktops and other physical in-office tools” and opt for the latest cloud solutions, the Connecticu­t-based market researcher said.

In the Mena region, enduser spending on public cloud is forecast to reach $5.8bn this year, growing 18.8 per cent year-on-year.

Several global players are establishi­ng data centres in the region as the cloud market picks up.

In 2020, IBM unveiled two data centres in the UAE, making its first foray into the Middle East and Africa cloud storage market. In 2019, Amazon Web Services opened three data centres in Bahrain.

Germany’s SAP has centres in Dubai, Riyadh and Dammam, which house servers for local cloud computing clients. Alibaba Cloud – a comparativ­ely smaller player and the cloud computing arm of the Chinese e-commerce company – opened its first regional data centre in Dubai in 2016.

“Public cloud services have become so integral that providers are now forced to address social and political challenges, such as sustainabi­lity and data sovereignt­y,” Mr Nag said.

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