Key Takeaways
- Elon Musk announces 500-megawatt xAI data center in Saudi Arabia
- Partnership with Saudi HUMAIN AI company and sovereign wealth fund
- Facility will be powered by Nvidia computing chips
- Announcement follows US-Saudi AI cooperation agreement
Elon Musk has revealed plans for a massive 500-megawatt data center in Saudi Arabia during his xAI company’s partnership announcement with the kingdom’s HUMAIN AI firm. The project represents one of the largest AI computing facilities globally and comes as Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman continues his US visit.
Massive Computing Power
The new Saudi data center will significantly surpass xAI’s existing Colossus 1 facility in Memphis, which currently operates at approximately 300 megawatts. Both installations will utilize Nvidia’s advanced computing chips to power artificial intelligence operations.
Separately, Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang announced a 100-megawatt data center for Amazon Web Services with “a gigawatt ambition and counting,” also powered by Nvidia technology.
Strategic Partnerships
The data center announcements follow Tuesday’s unveiling of a new AI Memorandum of Understanding between the United States and Saudi Arabia. The agreement provides “the Kingdom access to world-leading American systems while protecting U.S. technology from foreign influence,” according to White House statements.
HUMAIN AI, xAI’s Saudi partner, was established with backing from the kingdom’s sovereign wealth fund, highlighting the strategic importance of AI development in Saudi Arabia’s economic diversification plans.
Future Vision
During the joint presentation with Huang and Saudi Minister of Communications Abdullah Alswaha, Musk outlined an ambitious future vision featuring robots and space-based AI infrastructure.
“Humanoid robots will be the biggest product ever,” Musk declared, suggesting widespread robot adoption could make traditional work optional.
Looking further ahead, Musk predicted: “Perhaps in the four or five-year time frame, the lowest-cost way to do AI compute will be with solar-powered AI satellites.”
Announcement Moment
The announcement included a memorable moment when Musk initially misspoke about the facility’s scale, referencing a 500-gigawatt data center that would be “around 10 times larger than the world’s current data center energy consumption.” He quickly clarified that such a project would cost “8 bazillion trillion dollars” in a lighthearted correction.



