OmniOps Powers Saudi Arabia’s AI Future: From Sovereign Infrastructure to Global Expansion

Sep 15, 2025

Kholoud Hussein 

 

In a rapidly digitizing world, the demand for powerful, secure, and sustainable AI infrastructure is no longer optional—it’s essential. OmniOps, founded in 2024, has quickly emerged as a national pioneer in this space, becoming Saudi Arabia’s first dedicated AI infrastructure technologies provider. The company has recently secured SAR 30 million in funding to accelerate the deployment of sovereign AI inference clusters and strengthen its R&D capabilities. Positioned at the intersection of innovation, compliance, and sustainability, OmniOps is tackling some of the most pressing challenges faced by enterprises and government institutions in their AI transformation journeys.

 

What sets OmniOps apart is its commitment to building local, production-grade infrastructure tailored to the Kingdom’s regulatory and operational needs. With a client base already including Saudia Airlines and CNTXT, and strategic partnerships with global tech giants like NVIDIA and Google Cloud, OmniOps is well on its way to becoming a cornerstone of Saudi Arabia’s Vision 2030 and its National Strategy for Data and AI. In an exclusive interview with Sharikat Mubasher, Mohammed Altassan, CEO of OmniOps, shares how the company is balancing high performance with sustainability, navigating regulatory frameworks, addressing talent gaps, and charting a course for regional and international growth.

 

OmniOps recently closed a funding round of SAR 30 million. What are the core goals behind this raise, and how do you plan to allocate the investment to scale your operations?

 

This funding round is focused on accelerating the deployment of our sovereign AI inference clusters across the Kingdom and investing in our next-generation AI inference software layer. The capital will be allocated toward expanding our infrastructure footprint, enhancing our R&D capabilities, particularly around sustainable AI Infrastructure architecture, and scaling our engineering team to support growing demand across sectors such as aviation, finance, and government. 

 

We're also investing in client enablement and partnerships to ensure our customers can unlock real-world value from our infrastructure.

 

Founded in 2024 as Saudi Arabia’s first AI infrastructure technologies provider, what market gap did you identify that led to the creation of OmniOps?

 

We identified a critical gap in sovereign AI infrastructure. While demand for AI solutions is rising across Saudi Arabia, enterprises lacked access to high-performance, locally hosted infrastructure that complied with data residency requirements. Most available options were either international clouds with limited regional presence or generic infrastructure not optimized for AI workloads. To add to that, public and private institutions are adopting artificial intelligence at a phenomenal rate which is creating a heavy load on their infrastructure and resources. 

 

OmniOps was created to address this, offering Saudi-built, production-grade infrastructure optimized for AI inference and compliant with local regulations.

 

Your focus on building sustainable AI infrastructure is a key differentiator. How do your solutions balance energy efficiency with computing power at scale?

 

We’ve developed proprietary GPU overbooking methods that enable us to achieve a 50% reduction in power consumption while boosting inference efficiency by up to 14 times. This means we can offer clients the computational performance they need for AI workloads, without the environmental and operational costs traditionally associated with AI Infrastructure. Our clusters are designed to be both high-performance and energy-conscious, enabling sustainable AI development at scale.

 

One of your strategic pillars is developing sovereign AI inference clusters that meet local compliance standards. How do you ensure regulatory alignment without compromising on technical performance?

 

Compliance is integrated into our infrastructure by design from day one. We help clients store their data on-premises (on-prem), in the cloud, or in a hybrid cloud set up as is needed for compliance and best performance. At the same time, we’ve built a software and hardware stack that delivers enterprise-grade performance, with no trade-off on speed or scalability. Our regulatory alignment is not a limitation—it’s a strength that allows us to serve sectors with high compliance demands, such as healthcare, finance, and aviation.

 

You’ve partnered with global tech leaders such as NVIDIA, Google Cloud, and IBM. How do these partnerships enhance your technical capabilities and support your long-term product vision?

 

These companies provide the critical infrastructure that powers most essential sectors globally. OmniOps builds upon and collaborates with their foundational technologies to create our specialized solutions. This integration allows us to optimize our platform for the latest advancements, ensuring our Inference Optimizer delivers maximum performance gains. By working closely with these technology leaders, we enhance Saudi organizations' access to world-class AI infrastructure while maintaining compatibility with global standards.

 

With clients like Saudia Airlines and CNTXT already on board, which additional industries are you targeting? How do you tailor your infrastructure solutions to meet the specific demands of different sectors?

 

Our approach begins with understanding each sector's unique challenges, regulatory requirements, and AI maturity. For example, in education, we are designing an infrastructure that supports personalized learning environments that can handle the increasing adoption of AI, while ensuring student data privacy and security. This sector-specific approach allows Saudi organizations to implement AI that directly addresses their unique operational needs while maximizing return on infrastructure investments.

 

How does OmniOps’ strategy align with Saudi Arabia’s Vision 2030 and the National Strategy for Data and AI, particularly regarding digital sovereignty and local content development?

 

OmniOps is directly aligned with Vision 2030’s goals of building a digital economy rooted in local innovation. Our sovereign AI infrastructure advances the Kingdom’s digital sovereignty by ensuring that critical data and models remain within national borders. We also contribute to local content development by hiring and training Saudi talent, partnering with local universities, and investing in R&D initiatives that position the Kingdom as a leader in AI infrastructure.

 

What are the main challenges you face in building AI infrastructure in the Kingdom, and how are you addressing those hurdles—whether technical, regulatory, or talent-related?

 

One of the main challenges is the availability of specialized AI infrastructure talent, which is why we invest heavily in training and upskilling. We also navigate evolving regulatory frameworks by working closely with relevant authorities to ensure full compliance while advocating for innovation-friendly policies. On the technical side, the biggest hurdle is delivering global-level performance locally, and our R&D focus ensures we meet and exceed those standards.

 

Are there plans for regional or global expansion? If so, which markets are you prioritizing, and what’s your approach to entering them?

OmniOps is actively forming strategic partnerships with leading players in the AI infrastructure space. Several of these partners are exploring Saudi Arabia as a key market and view OmniOps as their conduit for entry and expansion in the region. In parallel, these relationships are creating reciprocal opportunities for OmniOps to establish a presence in the U.S. market through their networks and infrastructure.

 

We are also targeting the European market, with a strategic entry point through our Moroccan office. Our approach focuses on identifying and aligning with the right partners to accelerate market access and regional growth across the continent. 

 

Finally, what is your long-term vision for OmniOps? How do you plan to maintain leadership in the evolving landscape of AI infrastructure across Saudi Arabia and beyond?

 

Our vision is to become the foundational layer of AI infrastructure across the region—empowering enterprises and governments to build and scale intelligent applications securely and sustainably. We’ll maintain leadership by continuing to innovate in energy-efficient AI infrastructure, expanding our AI inferencing, and growing a strong ecosystem of local talent and strategic partners. Ultimately, we aim to help shape a future where Saudi Arabia is not just a consumer of AI but a global contributor to its development.

 

In conclusion, OmniOps isn’t just building AI infrastructure—it’s laying the groundwork for Saudi Arabia’s digital sovereignty, global competitiveness, and future leadership in artificial intelligence. By marrying technical performance with regulatory compliance, and innovation with sustainability, the company is aligning itself perfectly with the core tenets of Vision 2030. Its sector-specific solutions, talent development initiatives, and plans for global expansion demonstrate a comprehensive strategy to not only support but also shape the AI landscape in the Kingdom and beyond.

 

As OmniOps looks ahead, its long-term vision is bold yet grounded: to become the foundational layer of intelligent systems across the region. In doing so, the company is helping reposition Saudi Arabia not merely as a consumer of cutting-edge AI technologies, but as a global contributor and innovator in this critical domain.

 

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Latest Experts Thoughts

How to Validate a Startup Idea Before You Build It

Ghada Ismail

 

Every year, startups launch with big ambitions, exciting ideas, and dreams of becoming the next success story. Founders spend months building apps, designing products, and preparing launch plans. But many startups run into the same problem: they create something people do not actually need.

That is why validation matters.

Before investing serious time, money, and energy into a startup, founders need to know whether there is genuine demand for what they are building. Validation is not about killing creativity or slowing momentum. It is about making smarter decisions early and avoiding costly mistakes later.

 

Start With the Problem, Not the Product

A lot of entrepreneurs get excited about an idea and immediately jump into building the product. But successful startups usually begin with a real problem, not just a clever solution.

Ask yourself a few honest questions. What problem are you solving? Who experiences this problem every day? And is it frustrating enough that people would actively look for a solution?

The best way to answer these questions is by talking to people directly. Have conversations with potential users. Ask them about their experiences, frustrations, and current alternatives. Instead of trying to convince them that your idea is great, focus on listening.

When multiple people describe the same issue repeatedly, that is often a strong sign that you are solving something meaningful.

 

Define Your Audience Clearly

One common mistake founders make is trying to target everyone. In reality, validation works better when you focus on a specific group first.

Think carefully about who your ideal customer is. Are you targeting students, small businesses, working parents, freelancers, or enterprise companies? The clearer your audience, the easier it becomes to understand their behavior and needs.

For example, validating a fintech app for university students requires a completely different approach than validating software for logistics companies.

Knowing your audience also helps you understand how they currently solve the problem—and whether they would realistically switch to your solution.

 

Research the Market

Some founders worry when they discover competitors in the market. But competition is not always a bad sign. In many cases, it proves there is already demand.

Take time to study businesses operating in the same space. Look at their pricing, features, customer reviews, and overall positioning. Pay attention to complaints customers frequently mention because those gaps could become opportunities for your startup.

At the same time, avoid copying competitors blindly. Validation is not about building the same thing with a different logo. It is about understanding what customers still feel is missing.

And if you cannot find any competitors at all, that may also be worth questioning. Sometimes a market is untapped, but sometimes there is simply no demand.

 

Build a Simple Version First

You do not need a fully developed product to start validating your idea.

Many successful startups begin with a Minimum Viable Product, often called an MVP. This is a basic version of your idea, designed to quickly and cheaply test interest.

An MVP could be a landing page, a prototype, a waitlist, a short demo video, or even a social media page explaining your concept.

The goal is not perfection. The goal is learning.

Watch how people respond. Are they signing up? Asking questions? Sharing it with others? Or are they losing interest after the first interaction?

Real behavior tells you far more than polite compliments ever will.

 

Focus on Actions, Not Opinions

Friends and family will often encourage your idea because they want to support you. But encouragement is not validation.

The real question is whether people are willing to take action.

Would they join a waiting list? Book a demo? Pre-order the product? Pay for early access?

These actions matter because they show genuine interest. Many startup founders confuse positive feedback with actual demand, and the two are very different.

Someone saying “That sounds cool” is not the same as someone opening their wallet.

 

Test Whether People Will Pay

One of the biggest validation mistakes founders make is avoiding conversations about money.

A startup can solve a real problem and still fail if customers are not willing to pay enough for the solution.

Testing pricing early helps you understand whether your business model is realistic. Even simple experiments—such as different pricing options on a landing page or discussing budgets during customer interviews—can reveal valuable insights.

If people hesitate when pricing enters the conversation, you may need to rethink your positioning or value proposition.

 

To Wrap Things Up…

Building a startup always involves risk, but validation helps reduce unnecessary uncertainty. Instead of relying on guesses, founders learn directly from real people and real market behavior.

It may feel tempting to build quickly and figure things out later, but taking the time to validate first can save enormous amounts of time, money, and frustration in the future.

In the end, the strongest startup ideas are not just innovative; they solve real problems for real people.

Due Diligence: The Financial Deep Dive Every Startup Must Survive

Kholoud Hussein 

 

In the world of venture capital, mergers, and rapid-growth startups, few terms carry as much weight—or anxiety—as due diligence. It is the checkpoint between a startup’s ambition and an investor’s capital, the rigorous validation process that determines whether a business is truly worth the risk. Although often spoken about as a routine step, due diligence has evolved into a sophisticated, multilayered investigation that shapes the fate of fundraising rounds, acquisitions, and even long-term survival.

At its core, due diligence refers to the comprehensive assessment conducted by investors, acquirers, or financial institutions to evaluate a startup’s viability—financially, legally, operationally, and strategically. It is the process through which claims are tested, risks are measured, and assumptions are either validated or exposed. For early-stage founders, this is the moment when the narrative must finally match the numbers.

In practical terms, due diligence begins when an investor shows serious interest in a startup. The glossy pitch deck no longer suffices; instead, founders must provide access to detailed financial reports, customer metrics, intellectual property documentation, legal filings, product performance data, and more. Everything from revenue consistency to founder equity structure is scrutinized. The goal is simple: to ensure that what the startup says it is building aligns with what it actually operates.

This process typically spans several categories—financial, legal, technical, and commercial. Financial due diligence reveals whether revenues are stable or inflated, whether burn rate is manageable, and whether the business’s cost structure is built for scale. Legal due diligence uncovers potential landmines: unregistered trademarks, unsettled disputes, improper employment contracts, or shareholder conflicts that could hinder growth. Technical due diligence has become increasingly essential in a world dominated by AI, cloud software, and cybersecurity threats, as investors assess whether the product is robust, defensible, or even feasible at scale. Commercial due diligence, meanwhile, evaluates market potential—customer retention, competitive positioning, and sector dynamics.

For startups, due diligence functions as a double-edged sword. While it is often stressful and time-consuming, it also acts as a validation milestone. A company that passes rigorous due diligence signals maturity and credibility in the market. Investors tend to view such startups not just as promising, but as stable and trustworthy. In regions such as the GCC, where the venture capital landscape is accelerating rapidly, due diligence has become essential in separating hype from genuine scalability.

Startups are increasingly preparing for due diligence earlier than ever—sometimes before even seeking investment. Many adopt internal “data room” structures, organize compliance documentation, and maintain accurate financial records to avoid last-minute surprises. This preparation reflects a broader maturity in the ecosystem: as competition increases, investors demand cleaner, more transparent operations.

In Saudi Arabia, for example, the surge in venture capital activity under Vision 2030 has brought heightened attention to governance and operational resilience. With record-breaking investments across sectors like fintech, logistics, cloud services, and AI, startups are expected to demonstrate not only innovation but also sustainable growth paths supported by data. Due diligence is the mechanism ensuring that capital is deployed responsibly in this new economy.

Global investors entering the MENA region also rely heavily on robust due diligence to navigate fragmented regulations, young markets, and rapidly growing sectors. For many foreign funds, the depth and transparency of due diligence outcomes often determine whether they will green-light an investment in the region. Consequently, startups that maintain high-quality operational discipline gain a competitive edge—not just locally, but globally.

In essence, due diligence is not a barrier; it is a blueprint. For founders, preparing for it forces clarity of vision, discipline around metrics, and alignment across teams. For investors, it is the safeguard that ensures capital goes to companies with real potential. And for the broader startup ecosystem, it serves as a mechanism of integrity—one that helps shape sustainable growth.

As venture capital deepens its roots in emerging markets and competition for capital intensifies, due diligence will remain the defining test of a startup’s readiness. In the end, the companies that embrace transparency, maintain operational rigor, and deliver measurable results will be the ones that survive the scrutiny—and secure the funding needed to thrive.

 

REITs explained: How to invest in buildings without buying a building

Noha Gad

 

People often think building wealth through property means buying a house, managing tenants, and handling repairs, but there are simpler, more liquid ways to capture real estate returns without becoming a landlord. Investors who want exposure to commercial buildings, warehouses, data centers, or apartment complexes can do so through vehicles that behave more like stocks than physical assets, helping them focus on allocation and income rather than daily property management. A Real Estate Investment Trust (REIT) is one of those vehicles.

 

What are REITs?

REITs are companies that own, operate, or finance income-producing real estate across a wide range of property sectors. These investments can often be purchased through top brokerage and real estate crowdfunding platforms. They allow investors to earn income from real estate without having to buy, manage, or finance properties by themselves.

REITs make institutional-scale real estate accessible to individual investors by packaging property cash flows into tradable shares, offering a combination of regular income, potential capital appreciation, and diversification benefits that differ from both direct property ownership and traditional equities.

They invest in different properties, including apartment complexes, data centers, healthcare facilities, hotels, infrastructure, office buildings, retail centers, self-storage units, timberland, and warehouses. They often specialize in specific real estate sectors, like commercial properties. However, many hold diversified portfolios with different property types.

REITs perform three primary roles: acquire and manage income-producing properties; finance real estate through mortgages or mortgage-backed securities; or combine both activities in a hybrid model. Equity REITs generate cash by leasing space and managing properties; mortgage REITs earn interest on loans and securities; hybrids mix rental income and interest income. 

 

Criteria for REIT Qualification

A company must meet several requirements to qualify as a REIT, including:

  • Must be a taxable corporation.
  • Must be managed by a board of directors or trustees.
  • Have no more than 50% of its shares held by five or fewer individuals
  • Invest at least 75% of total assets in real estate or cash.
  • Derive at least 75% of gross income from rent, interest on mortgages that finance real estate, or real estate sales.
  • Pay a minimum of 90% of their taxable income to their shareholders through dividends.
  • Have a minimum of 100 shareholders.

 

Key types of REITs

  1. Equity REITs. Equity REITs own and manage income-generating real estate. Revenues are generated primarily through rent, not by reselling properties. They offer more stable, operational cash flows tied to occupancy, lease terms, and rent growth. This type is commonly the go-to vehicle for investors seeking dividend income plus potential appreciation from rising property values.
  2. Mortgage REITs. Mortgage REITs invest in mortgages, mortgage-backed securities, or other real-estate debt instruments and earn income from the interest spread. Because their returns depend on interest-rate spreads and financing conditions, Mortgage REITs are generally more sensitive to rate volatility and can show higher short-term earnings variability than equity REITs.
  3. Hybrid REITs. This type combines strategies from both equity and mortgage REITs, holding both properties and real-estate debt. This structure can offer diversification within a single vehicle but also mixes the operational risks of property ownership with the interest-rate and credit risks of mortgage lending.
  4. Private REITs. These REITs are sold to accredited investors or institutions and are not registered with public exchanges; they often pursue niche strategies, bespoke property portfolios, or longer-term value creation. Private REITs can offer access to specialized deals but carry higher minimums, limited transparency, and extended lock-ups.

Why investors use REITs?

REITs help investors access property returns through tradable shares, combining income potential with professional management and easier liquidity. Key reasons why investors include REITs in portfolios are:

  • Generating income: REITs pay out most taxable income as dividends, providing regular cash flow and often higher yields than typical stocks.
  • Diversification: REITs add real-estate cash flows and property-value returns to a portfolio, lowering concentration risk compared to holding only stocks or bonds.
  • Inflation hedge: Property rents and lease escalators can help preserve purchasing power, with faster pass-through in sectors with shorter leases.
  • Liquidity and accessibility: REITs let investors buy real-estate exposure easily through a brokerage without large capital or hands-on management.
  • Professional management and scale: REITs are run by experienced property and capital-markets teams who can access deals and financing that individual investors usually cannot.

Sovereign-by-Design Architectures: Building transparency and traceability into your data

By: Michael Cade, Global Field CTO, Veeam Software 

 

So far, AI adoption has outpaced regulatory frameworks, leaving organizations largely to make up their own rules. But this lack of clarity hasn’t slowed organizations down. In fact, McKinsey’s latest survey found that 88% of organizations already report using AI in at least one business function. Despite this, innovation has slowed, and it’s become clear that organizations have overlooked a key enabler of safe and secure AI - data sovereignty.

Simultaneously, regulation has begun to catch up, and much of it points to the same principles of data sovereignty and AI visibility. Take the EU AI Act, for example, which sets strict, risk-based rules on both AI development and deployment within the EU to improve AI visibility. 

Rather than blindly charging ahead, organizations need to pause to develop transparent, traceable, and sovereign-by-design data architectures. Otherwise, they won’t just be unable to unlock the true potential of AI for their businesses; they’ll also fall behind on regulatory compliance. 

 

Not all data is good data.

As you might expect, both digital sovereignty and AI innovation boil down to data. It’s already well documented that AI needs a lot of data, and we’ve got plenty, with the IDC estimating that the global datasphere reached around 181 zettabytes annually in 2025. But, despite having plenty of data, Generative AI (genAI) pilots continue to fail widely. Some research suggests that as many as 95% of enterprise genAI pilots fail to reach production, or even demonstrate measurable ROI. The reason? Long-standing data hygiene issues. 

Thanks in no small part to AI, data growth has become exponential, but organizations have largely failed to keep up. This influx has far outpaced storage processes, and organizations have somewhat taken their eye off the ball, with ‘junk’ data being stored alongside the ‘useful’ data required for AI usage. And ultimately, AI systems inherit not just the bias but also the quality and structure of the data they are trained on. So, if the training sets are poorly structured and include ‘junk’ data, outputs, and usability suffer. 

There’s also a significant knock-on effect with compliance and regulation. While regulatory bodies are yet to agree on a unified approach to AI regulation, it’s already becoming clear that visibility will be central to future requirements. In Europe alone, the EU AI Act and the NIS2 Directive are already signaling a broader push for stronger governance, transparency, and control over operational and training data. And without strong sovereignty, organizations will remain unable to map and understand their data landscape to adhere to existing and future requirements. 

 

Sorting the wheat from the chaff 

After the last few years of data growth, the sheer scale of the workloads most businesses now hold can seem daunting. Before organizations can improve their data hygiene, they first need to understand and classify their data. Not just for what it contains, but also according to how sensitive it is. A piece of data may be useful for a genAI pilot, but if it’s too sensitive, it cannot be used. This level of understanding not only avoids mistakenly giving genAI programmes sensitive data, but could also be key to creating genAI that delivers on its potential. Instead of training it on a pile of ‘useful’ data peppered with ‘junk’ data, organizations will be able to feed AI only the information it actually needs. 

Once this is all in place and you know what you’re working with, organizations can begin to define the sovereignty requirements for each data bucket, including both regulatory and locality rules. For some, the knee-jerk reaction is to restrict usage to meet the strongest requirements of data localization laws. Still, the EU’s GDPR, for example, doesn’t mandate localization within a specific EU country, just to the European Economic Area (EEA), although it does place strict restrictions on the transfer of personal data outside the EEA – creating a ‘soft localization’ effect in practice. There’s a lot of nuance within this, which is why many organizations are adopting hybrid or multi-cloud architectures to maintain flexibility over where workloads are processed and stored. With these, organizations can restrict data where needed to meet localization requirements, while still maintaining data portability, which will be essential as regulations continue to change. This flexibility and transparency allow organizations not just to monitor where their data resides, but who can access it - essential knowledge not just for compliance, but for security too. 

 

Not just a tickbox

Up until now, data sovereignty has been relegated to the bottom of the priority list, seen mostly as a compliance exercise. Organizations have ticked it off, but only as part of a longer list of regulatory requirements, rather than considering it as a vital part of their data strategy. But if fully understood and wielded correctly, aligned with the wider business strategy, it can do much more. 

Not only can it feed into the data governance frameworks that underpin operations, but it can also help inform and establish AI governance. With clean, structured, and classified data, organizations can finally unlock the true potential of their genAI pilots. 

So far, data sovereignty has been underestimated, but with genAI innovation stalling and regulation catching up, organizations can’t afford to do so any longer. 

The logistics revolution: How Saudi Arabia rewires world supply chains

Noha Gad

 

Saudi Arabia’s logistics ecosystem has been shaped by its strategic location, connecting the three continents with some of the world’s busiest trade routes. Since the launch of Vision 2030, the Kingdom has made broad reforms to improve coordination and performance of the logistics sector. This included restructuring key entities across transport, ports, aviation, and rail, in addition to establishing new institutions and expanding the national carriers and infrastructure projects.  

Guided by the National Transport and Logistics Strategy (NTLS), aiming to transform Saudi Arabia into a logistics hub, the sector has expanded infrastructure, strengthened connectivity, and developed logistics zones across the Kingdom. Since its launch, over $75 billion in investment contracts have been signed across multiple transport modes, according to the Vision 2030 Annual Report 2025. These efforts have improved efficiency and reduced friction across the system, supported by digitalized services, simplified procedures, and stronger integration between entities.

The Kingdom successfully achieved groundbreaking developments to build a robust network of rail, ports, and infrastructure to strengthen the ecosystem. Key milestones included the expansion of King Abdulaziz Port in Dammam, the establishment of a new logistics corridor linking Jeddah Islamic Port to Al-Khumrah, and the launch of the India-Middle East-Europe Economic Corridor. This progress reflects stronger supply chains, expanded logistics capacity, and improved integration across transport systems, alongside greater regional connectivity and streamlined customs procedures, enhancing the flow of regional and international trade.

With these developments, Saudi Arabia has advanced across global logistics indicators, supported by sustained investment in infrastructure and operational performance. The Kingdom ranked second in the G20 group with the highest cargo throughput growth rate at 32%. It was also selected among the top four emerging markets in the Agility Logistics Index in 2025.

The country also saw a notable improvement in 2024 in its global ranking for container handling, climbing to 15th place globally, as reported by Lloyd’s List. Jeddah Islamic Port moved up from 41st to 32nd, King Abdullah Port rose to 70th from 71st, and King Abdulaziz Port in Dammam advanced from 90th to 82nd, marking significant progress in the competitiveness of Saudi ports.

Mawani: A Key Enabler Revolutionizing Logistics

The Saudi Ports Authority (Mawani) is rapidly transforming Saudi Arabia into a logistics hub by launching new shipping lines, specialized logistics parks, and digital services to support Vision 2030. The authority has invested more than SAR 30 billion since the launch of Vision 2030 to develop the Kingdom’s ports, increasing its capacity by more than 50% in recent years.

In 2025, the authority added more than 34 new shipping services to the Saudi ports to reinforce Saudi Arabia’s position as a global logistics hub connecting Asia, Africa, and Europe. Key services included the Himalaya Express Service that connects King Abdulaziz Port with 12 global ports with a capacity of over 14,000 TEUs, and the MEDEX Service, which links Jeddah Islamic Port with 12 global ports, boasting a capacity of over 10,000 TEUs, in addition to RSX1, SJA, and BOS services.

In March, Mawani announced the launch of five new maritime shipping services to enhance the resilience of the logistics sector and ensure the continuity of supply chains and the flow of goods, ultimately reinforcing the Kingdom’s position as a global logistics hub. These services are:

  1. Gulf Shuttle. This service was launched to connect King Abdulaziz Port in Dammam with Khalifa Bin Salman Port in Bahrain, with a capacity of up to 3,000 TEUs (Twenty-foot Equivalent Unit). Through this service, Mawani aims to support national exports, improve operational efficiency at the port, and strengthen the Kingdom’s position as a regional and global logistics center.
  2. Redex by CMA CGM. With a capacity of 2,594 TEUs, this service enhances maritime connectivity with Arab countries, including Egypt and Jordan, and supports global trade flows.
  3. Jade by MSC. This service was added to Jeddah Islamic Port and King Abdullah Port, linking the Kingdom to eight regional and global ports and offering a capacity of 24,000 TEUs. This initiative also strengthens inland logistics connectivity between Jeddah Port and the GCC countries.
  4. Maersk’s new AE19 shipping service. This high-capacity service, utilizing vessels capable of carrying up to 17,000 TEUs, links Jeddah to primary Asian hubs including Shanghai, Ningbo, Qingdao, and Xingang in China, Busan in Korea, and Tanjung Pelepas in Malaysia.
  5. Hapag-Lloyd’s SE4 Service. This new route links Jeddah to major international hubs in China, Korea, and Malaysia, boasting a capacity of up to 17,000 TEUs.

Logistics Corridors Initiative 

Mawani launched this integrated initiative to enable the transport of containers arriving at the Kingdom’s western coast ports through dedicated land routes to various regions of the Kingdom and GCC countries, contributing to reduced handling time and improved operational efficiency at ports. This initiative was designed to enhance supply chain efficiency and facilitate cargo movement between the Kingdom’s ports.

Port of NEOM

This strategic gateway on the Red Sea connects the three continents while advancing regional integration through multimodal corridors with Egypt, Saudi Arabia, and Iraq. It currently provides a comprehensive suite of services designed to meet the demands of modern trade: general and project cargo, containerized shipments, bulk consignments, warehousing, and RoRo (roll on–roll off) ferry operations. 

In April, NEOM announced the launch of a new multimodal land bridge connecting Europe to the GCC through Egypt and northwest Saudi Arabia, in partnership with Pan Marine, with support from DFDS and regional logistics players. This integration allows truck-carried freight to move directly from Europe to Egypt and into the Gulf, via the Port of NEOM, offering an alternative to previous only container flows and enabling the movement of critical goods, including FMCG and other time-sensitive cargo.

The new route is already in active use by importers from several European countries, including Italy, the UK, Germany, and Poland, and provides direct access into the UAE, Kuwait, Oman, the wider GCC, and Iraq, supporting customers seeking predictable and efficient market entry. This corridor helped reduce transit time by more than 50%, featuring over 900 KM covered by shipments.

Private Sector Contribution 

The private sector has played a pivotal role in strengthening Saudi Arabia’s position as a regional and global logistics leader by driving infrastructure improvements and forming partnerships with global firms. According to the Vision 2030 Annual Report 2025, total private sector investment surpassed SAR 30 billion by the end of 2025. 

Additionally, the private sector provided privatization investments worth more than SAR 21 billion through 16 contracts and secured SAR 11 billion contracts with local and international partners to establish 29 logistics centers.

Private-sector companies also enhanced the operational efficiency of logistics services across the Kingdom by adopting advanced technologies like automation and digital supply chain systems, improving speed and reliability for trade routes connecting Asia, Europe, and Africa.

Finally, Saudi Arabia's logistics sector stands at the forefront of Vision 2030, transformed by strategic reforms, massive infrastructure investments, and innovative initiatives driven by the National Transport and Logistics Strategy. The private sector's pivotal contributions in funding, technology adoption, and global partnerships have accelerated this progress, ensuring seamless connectivity across continents and enhanced trade efficiency. As the Kingdom continues to climb global rankings and pioneer multimodal corridors, it solidifies its role as a premier logistics hub, driving economic diversification and sustainable growth for the future.