Humain Sets Aside 50 Megawatts Of Saudi Compute For Cohere Models
Humain will designate at least 50 megawatts of dedicated compute capacity for Cohere foundational models, the companies said. The Saudi-backed AI company expects the expansion to be live by late 2027, but the announcement did not disclose the site, power supplier, pricing or hardware mix.

The companies said Humain will reserve Saudi AI compute capacity for Cohere, giving the Canadian model developer at least 50 megawatts of dedicated infrastructure for its next-generation foundational models.
The companies said Humain will designate the capacity under a collaboration announced during Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney's visit to Saudi Arabia.
The expansion is expected to be live by late 2027 and can increase over the following five years.
Humain Designates 50 Megawatts For Cohere AI Models
Humain is backed by Saudi Arabia's Public Investment Fund.
The agreement gives Cohere a Gulf compute base while Canada works to diversify trade and investment ties beyond the US.
Tariq Amin, chief executive of Humain, said Cohere's selection of Humain for a significant international AI compute deployment outside North America shows the AI infrastructure the Saudi company is building and its ability to support model research and development.
The announcement did not name the Saudi site for the 50-megawatt allocation, identify the power supplier, list the accelerator hardware, or disclose commercial pricing for Cohere's reserved capacity.
Gulf Capital Enters Canada's AI And Energy Talks
Carney's visit came as Ottawa looks for Gulf investment channels amid trade tension with the US.
The talks named mining, energy and AI logistics as investment areas.
In January, Maninder Sidhu, Canada's international trade minister, told Reuters that liquefied natural gas investment was one Canadian target.
He also said XRG, Adnoc's international investment arm, was examining Canadian natural gas projects.
The AI collaboration sits alongside a broader Gulf-Canada investment push covering compute, energy and strategic technology.
Qatar's AI champion Qai and a January Canada-Qatar partnership add further Gulf links across AI, quantum computing, defence and other sectors.
Canada Adds Domestic AI Data Centre Capacity
Canada is also building more AI infrastructure at home.
Meta said on Wednesday that it plans its first Canadian data centre, a 1 gigawatt facility in Alberta that will cost about $9 billion and take two to three years to build.
The Canadian government is working on a national strategy to support AI literacy and the foundations for sovereign Canadian AI.
Cohere's Humain deal gives one Canadian AI company a planned Gulf compute path while that domestic strategy develops.
The Humain-Cohere announcement did not disclose the Saudi facility location, grid-connection plan, cooling approach, hardware supplier, pricing, customer exclusivity terms or binding delivery milestones beyond the late-2027 target.


















