Saudi Arabia Gets $13M Green Data Center in Riyadh
A tech company is investing over $13 million to build one of Saudi Arabia's most energy-efficient data centers, designed to meet the kingdom's exploding demand for cloud computing and AI services. The facility aims for exceptional sustainability with a power efficiency rating below 1.4.
Saudi Arabia is getting a major boost to its digital infrastructure with a $13.3 million green data center that puts sustainability front and center.
Middle Eastern tech company Letsia announced it will invest SAR 50 million to build the HyperDC facility in Riyadh, scheduled to begin operations in February 2027. The 8,000-square-meter site will house state-of-the-art computing infrastructure designed specifically for cloud services, artificial intelligence applications, and enterprise digital needs.
What sets this project apart is its environmental ambition. The facility is targeting a Power Usage Effectiveness score below 1.4, meaning most electricity will power actual computing rather than being wasted on cooling and support systems.
The data center will meet Tier III standards, guaranteeing 99.982 percent uptime for customers who can't afford disruptions. That level of reliability makes it suitable for banks, government agencies, and major corporations running critical operations.
Mohamed Rabie Moawad, Letsia's founder and chairman, says the project marks an important evolution for his company. "The next stage for Letsia is no longer about building from zero. It is about scaling what we have built."
The Ripple Effect
This investment arrives as Saudi Arabia races to become the Middle East's digital infrastructure powerhouse. The kingdom's data center market is expected to nearly double from $2.38 billion in 2026 to $4.35 billion by 2031, driven by cloud adoption, AI growth, and government digitization programs.
The timing aligns perfectly with Saudi Vision 2030 and the Saudi Green Initiative, both emphasizing sustainable technology that reduces carbon emissions while supporting economic growth. As businesses worldwide demand greener computing options, projects like HyperDC prove that environmental responsibility and technological progress can advance together.
The facility will support everything from everyday cloud storage to high-performance computing for artificial intelligence research. By creating infrastructure that serves both current needs and future innovation, Letsia is helping build the digital backbone that modern economies require.
Saudi Arabia's commitment to sustainable digital infrastructure shows how emerging tech hubs can leapfrog older models and build cleaner from the start.
Based on reporting by Regional: saudi arabia development (SA)
This story was written by BrightWire based on verified news reports.
Spread the positivity!
Share this good news with someone who needs it

