South Korea and the United Arab Emirates have taken a major step toward tightening their technological partnership with the launch of a new public-private innovation framework designed to accelerate joint development in artificial intelligence, energy systems, and next-generation digital infrastructure.
The initiative, unveiled following a high-level summit between South Korean President Lee Jae Myung and UAE President Mohamed bin Zayed Al Nahyan, aims to transform the two nations’ cooperation from traditional bilateral agreements into a coordinated, multi-layered innovation system anchored by a powerful task force.
At the center of the framework is a newly established task force overseen by South Korea’s presidential AI committee.
The team will be jointly led by the presidential secretary for AI policy and future planning and the vice chair of the Korea Chamber of Commerce and Industry, signaling that corporate and government leadership will share responsibility in shaping investment priorities.
The task force will propose concrete AI-driven collaboration projects by the end of the year, aligning its timeline with the UAE’s aggressive technology rollout schedule. Five specialized working groups, representing ministries focused on Science and ICT, Climate, Environment, and Energy, will contribute to shaping proposals, ensuring sector-specific insights guide future investments.
Officials say the structure is designed to “fast-track the integration of innovation” between one of Asia’s most advanced digital economies and one of the Middle East’s fastest-rising technology hubs.
The new framework follows the signing of seven memorandums of understanding that widen cooperation beyond AI into energy, defense, and industrial innovation.
While details of each MOU remain confidential, policymakers from both countries confirm the agreements cover strategic sectors critical to long-term national competitiveness.
The expanded cooperation effectively positions South Korean firms to play a greater role in the Gulf’s rapidly evolving digital infrastructure ecosystem, particularly in hardware manufacturing, renewable-powered energy systems, thermal management technologies, and high-density compute components.
For the UAE, the partnership supports its ambitions to become a global AI production hub backed by sovereign funding and long-term data-center expansion.
One of the largest opportunities emerging from this partnership is South Korea’s participation in the UAE’s ambitious Stargate initiative, a government-backed mega-project to build one of the world’s most advanced AI data-center campuses.
The program’s first facility, a 200-megawatt cluster expected to go live next year, will form the foundation of a planned 5-gigawatt campus spanning roughly 10 square miles. Long-lead mechanical equipment has already begun arriving on-site, with tenders for power systems, liquid-cooling units, networking gear, and construction phases expected to run through 2026 and beyond.
Stargate will draw power from a mix of nuclear, solar, and natural gas sources, a combination that aligns closely with South Korea’s energy-tech capabilities and opens opportunities for Korean vendors specializing in efficient cooling systems and large-scale grid management.
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