Close Menu
  • Home
  • News
  • Business
  • Lifestyle
    • Entertainment
    • Sport
    • Art & Entertainment
  • Travel
  • Tech
  • Others
    • Real Estate
      • Housing
      • Investment
      • Tourism
      • Property
        • Home & Interior
    • Jobs
    • Education
    • Community
  • Hot News
  • Abu Dhabi Week
  • Submit Your Story
X (Twitter)
  • Editorial Policy
  • About Us
  • Contact
X (Twitter) Instagram
Dubai Week
Subscribe
  • Home
  • News
  • Business
  • Lifestyle
    • Entertainment
    • Sport
    • Art & Entertainment
  • Travel
  • Tech
  • Others
    • Real Estate
      • Housing
      • Investment
      • Tourism
      • Property
        • Home & Interior
    • Jobs
    • Education
    • Community
  • Hot News
  • Abu Dhabi Week
  • Submit Your Story
Dubai Week
  • Home
  • News
  • Business
  • Lifestyle
  • Travel
  • Tech
  • Others
  • Hot News
  • Abu Dhabi Week
  • Submit Your Story
Home»Business»Cloudera Reaffirms Long-Term Commitment in Saudi Arabia
Business

Cloudera Reaffirms Long-Term Commitment in Saudi Arabia

By Sam AllcockJanuary 14, 2026Updated:January 14, 2026No Comments3 Mins Read
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

Cloudera, the only company delivering AI to data wherever it resides, has announced plans to open a new office in Saudi Arabia, underscoring its ongoing commitment to the Kingdom.

The move builds on years of collaboration with local organisations and supports Saudi Arabia’s Vision 2030 strategy for rapid digital transformation. The new office is set to open in early 2026, providing a local hub for staff and enabling customers to access Cloudera’s services directly.

A long-term investment in the Kingdom

Cloudera has worked with Saudi customers for more than six years across sectors including telecommunications, banking and financial services, oil and gas, and government. Creating a local legal entity will give Cloudera a stronger foothold in the Kingdom and allow it to play a bigger role in supporting national priorities around data governance, innovation, and skills development.

Ahmad Issa, Regional Vice President, Cloudera, said, “Customers want trusted partners on the ground who understand how the rules work in practice. This announcement solidifies our relationships, helps build stronger partnerships, and creates opportunities to train and hire local talent so Cloudera Arabia can grow alongside the Kingdom’s transformation.”

Why this matters for Saudi Arabia

As the Gulf’s largest economy, Saudi Arabia is one of the most active adopters of emerging technology. Its large-scale national projects create significant opportunities but also require technology vendors to establish a legal presence in the country.

By operating locally, Cloudera Arabia will align with the Kingdom’s priorities around data sovereignty, regulatory requirements, and digital innovation. This will support the delivery of large-scale AI initiatives across varied environments.

Cloudera offers a unified, open-source platform that ensures complete access to all data, regardless of location. For regulated sectors such as oil and gas, finance, healthcare, and government, the platform guarantees strong governance, traceability, and compliance in GovCloud, Sovereign Cloud, and air-gapped data centres, enabling real-time analysis and predictive insights without compromising security.

By leveraging an open-source ecosystem and decades of technological innovation, Cloudera empowers Saudi organisations to take full control of their data, workloads, deployments, and spending. This approach reduces reliance on single vendors, speeds up innovation, and supports the Kingdom’s digital transformation agenda.

Issa continued, “Saudi Arabia is investing heavily in building one of the most ambitious digital economies anywhere. By creating a local entity, we are making clear our commitment to the Kingdom’s long-term goals. Customers can rely on our hybrid platform to keep their data where it belongs, meet compliance requirements, and still unlock the full benefits of AI at scale.”

Flexibility remains the key differentiator for Cloudera Arabia. Unlike providers that restrict clients to one environment, its platform is designed to operate wherever data resides. This gives organisations greater control over workloads and costs.

This flexibility is particularly valuable in Saudi Arabia, where businesses are eager to harness AI but must also comply with strict data regulations. With Cloudera, workloads can be deployed in the cloud, within data centres, or in hybrid models.

Establishing a local legal presence enhances Cloudera Arabia’s reputation with Saudi enterprises and government entities, many of which prefer to work with locally registered companies. It also ensures compliance with Saudi data and cloud regulations, further underlining the company’s long-term commitment to the Kingdom.

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr WhatsApp Email
Previous ArticleHub71 Strengthens Partnership with Japan to Boost Cross-Border Innovation
Next Article Second Round of the President’s Cup for Jiu-Jitsu Set to Begin Friday in Abu Dhabi
Sam Allcock
  • Website
  • X (Twitter)
  • Instagram
  • LinkedIn

Sam Allcock is a seasoned journalist and digital marketing expert known for his insightful reporting across business, real estate, travel and lifestyle sectors. His recent work includes high-profile Dubai coverage, such as record-breaking events by AYS Developers. With a career spanning multiple outlets. Sam delivers sharp, engaging content that bridges UK and UAE markets. His writing reflects a deep understanding of emerging trends, making him a trusted voice in regional and international business journalism. Should you need any edits please contact editor@dubaiweek.ae

Related Posts

Digital Transformation in Bahrain: Practical Steps for Traditional Businesses

March 4, 2026

What Leopoldo Alejandro Betancourt López Learned About Risk From Building Power Plants at 24

March 3, 2026

Nuvello Real Estate Opens in Dubai with Focus on Practical Support for UK Families Moving to the UAE

February 27, 2026

Tabadulat and Minted Connect Sign Strategic Collaboration to Enable Shariah-Compliant Gold-Backed Investments

February 25, 2026
Business

Digital Transformation in Bahrain: Practical Steps for Traditional Businesses

By Power HaydenMarch 4, 20260 Business

In recent years, many established companies across the Kingdom have begun partnering with a trusted…

What Leopoldo Alejandro Betancourt López Learned About Risk From Building Power Plants at 24

March 3, 2026

Bitget’s Women’s Day Campaign Asks Web3 the Uncomfortable Question

March 3, 2026

Layers of Raspberry and Basil: How Blume Dubai Plans to Mark Women’s Day

March 2, 2026
X (Twitter)
  • About Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • DMCA Policy for Dubai Week
  • Editorial Policy
  • Contact
© 2026 Dubai Week

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.