Humain to launch agentic OS amid Saudi AI infra push

Home AI Infrastructure News Humain to launch agentic OS amid Saudi AI infra push
Humain

The company’s CEO, Tareq Amin said at the Cisco AI Summit that Humain will also launch a multi-agent orchestration platform designed to coordinate AI agents across enterprise workflows

In sum – what to know:

Two AI products – An agentic AI operating system and a multi-agent orchestration platform are already being tested internally.

Saudi power capacity – More than 15 GW of available power could cut AI infrastructure costs by 20–30%, says Humain.

Infrastructure priority – The company is focusing on data centers and execution before scaling models and applications.

Saudi data center developer Humain plans to launch two flagship products this year, including an agentic operating system and a multi-agent orchestration platform, as it builds out AI infrastructure designed to serve both domestic and international workloads.

Speaking at the recent Cisco AI Summit, Humain’s CEO Tareq Amin said the company is focused on the entire AI value chain and is prioritizing infrastructure as the foundation for its strategy.

He said the company is structured across five business entities, with its core data center division forming the base of the overall strategy.

Amin said Humain will release two flagship offerings in 2026: an agentic operating system and a multi-agent orchestration platform. “We think we have built the world first agentic operating system built in a customized Linux distro,” he said, adding that the system is already in use internally.

The second product is a multi-agent orchestration platform designed to coordinate AI agents across enterprise workflows.

In her presentation, Amin said the company’s infrastructure strategy is built around Saudi Arabia’s energy capacity, which he described as a major competitive advantage. “So the unique value proposition that Saudi has to the world is really power and energy. There is an abundance in the country that is just utterly remarkable,” he said.

He added that the country offers large amounts of available power at competitive prices. “Power available today is north of 15 gigawatts of capacity on power and at the right price, at the right tariffs,” Amin said. “So that means your total cost of ownership could be anywhere between 20 to 30% cheaper.”

He said this could enable the company to serve both domestic and international demand.

Amin also said Humain’s initial focus is on solving infrastructure constraints before scaling its model and application businesses. He described ongoing work with government entities to secure land and power for data center development.

Despite global concerns about power shortages, Amin said Humain’s main challenge is execution rather than resource constraints.

“What I’m really obsessed about is execution,” he said. “This is just a matter of execution. I see no obstacles,” he added.

He said the company is already working with global partners, building AI infrastructure for international customers.

Amin also said the company’s overall approach is to operate across the entire AI stack. “I pitched to my board an idea that we should be an AI company focused on the total AI value chain,” he said. That includes infrastructure, chips, models, applications and advisory services.

In May 2025, Humain and AWS had announced a major partnership to invest more than $5 billion in the field of artificial intelligence (AI). The collaboration will help build a special “AI Zone” in Saudi Arabia and drive AI adoption across the region and the world.

In October 2025, Humain and Qualcomm Technologies had announced a collaboration to deploy large-scale AI infrastructure in Saudi Arabia. The project seeks to build what the companies describe as the world’s first fully optimized edge-to-cloud hybrid AI system, offering global inferencing services.

Last month, Humain and the Kingdom’s National Infrastructure Fund (Infra) have agreed a non-binding $1.2 billion financing framework to support the buildout of up to 250MW of hyperscale AI data center capacity in Saudi Arabia.

The agreement was announced last week at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland. Backed by Saudi sovereign wealth fund PIF, Humain said the framework sets out indicative financing terms to support large-scale AI-focused facilities equipped with advanced GPUs for training and inference, serving customers across Saudi Arabia and international markets.

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