Chinese tech giant Tencent plots Middle East cloud expansion as spending in the region booms

Chinese tech giant Tencent plots Middle East cloud expansion as spending in the region booms


The Tencent logo is displayed on the exterior of a building at the company’s headquarters, with a surveillance camera visible in the foreground, on November 30, 2024, in Shenzhen, Guangdong Province, China. 

Cheng Xin | Getty Images News | Getty Images

Tencent plans to expand its data center footprint in the Middle East, a top executive at the Chinese tech giant told CNBC, as the company looks to boost its cloud computing business outside China.

Dowson Tong, CEO of Tencent’s cloud group, told CNBC that the company plans to expand the number of “availability zones,” locations designated as sites for potential clusters of data centers, for its cloud services over the next 12 to 18 months, in countries across Asia Pacific, Europe, and the Middle East.

In the Middle East, Tencent is “actively” exploring building data centers there to service cloud customers, Dowson added.

“We do intend to increase our investment in the region and establish a stronger partnership network. And that’s all in the plan,” he said, declining to give more specific timelines or countries where exactly the availability zones might be.

Tencent’s planned expansion in the Middle East comes as countries in the region draw in huge investments from tech giants to build AI data centers and other computing infrastructure.

Last year, Nvidia, OpenAI and others committed to building a massive AI infrastructure project under the Stargate brand in the United Arab Emirates.

Lenovo CFO: Major demand to push memory chip prices higher short-term

In August, analysts at Gartner forecast information technology spending in the Middle East and North Africa region to hit $155 billion in 2025, up nearly 9% year-on-year and above the global growth rate.

Tencent has already opened an availability zone in Saudi Arabia. Further expansion in the Middle East will likely put it into more direct competition with U.S. giants, including Amazon, Microsoft and Google.

Dowson said Tencent already has customers in Saudi Arabia buying its cloud services, such as Keeta, the international food delivery subsidiary of Chinese giant Meituan. Tencent, which is one of the world’s largest gaming companies, has gaming firms in the region also using its Saudi-based cloud services, Dowson added.

While most of Tencent’s revenue still comes from gaming, the company has sought to diversify its business by expanding other areas, including cloud computing.

Tencent is hoping to differentiate itself from U.S. rivals by using its strong customer base in China to expand internationally. For example, customers who use Tencent’s cloud in China may also buy the company’s services abroad.

The Middle East is becoming a key area of expansion for Chinese firms.

Lenovo, the world’s biggest PC company, has set up its regional headquarters in Saudi Arabia and is currently building a manufacturing plant there.

“I think there’s so much initiative and investment going into … the Middle East. So I think we’re very excited about the opportunity there,” Winston Cheng, CFO of Lenovo, told CNBC in an interview last week.



Source

Micron to invest  billion in Singapore plant as AI boom strains global memory supply
Technology

Micron to invest $24 billion in Singapore plant as AI boom strains global memory supply

A general view of Micron Technology’s building in Singapore, June 23, 2020.  Micron Gcm Studio | Reuters Micron Technology on Tuesday committed approximately $24 billion to expand its wafer manufacturing operations in Singapore, as the American memory chipmaker moves to expand production amid global shortages.  In a press release, Micron said the investment would add […]

Read More
Big Tech’s AI data center push is spawning a new heat economy
Technology

Big Tech’s AI data center push is spawning a new heat economy

Students at a tech university in Dublin are enjoying an unexpected perk of artificial intelligence — it’s helping heat their campus. Since 2023, the Technical University of Dublin’s Tallaght campus has been one of a growing number of buildings in the southwest suburban area of the city to be heated by waste heat from a […]

Read More
Microsoft’s plans for 15 more data centers win approval at former Wisconsin Foxconn site
Technology

Microsoft’s plans for 15 more data centers win approval at former Wisconsin Foxconn site

The Microsoft data center campus, currently under construction, is reflected in Mount Pleasant, Wisconsin, September 18, 2025. Audrey Richardson | Reuters Local officials have signed off on Microsoft’s plans to build 15 more data centers in Mount Pleasant, Wisconsin, near an existing site that the technology company is expanding. Additional data center capacity will allow […]

Read More