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UAE Sends 50 Government AI Chiefs to Learn Silicon Valley’s Secrets

by Faith Amonimo
September 26, 2025
in Artifical Intelligence, Middle East Innovation Frontier
Reading Time: 4 mins read
UAE Sends 50 Government AI Chiefs to Learn Silicon Valley’s Secrets

The UAE just pulled off something no other country has done before. Fifty Chief AI Officers from government agencies across the Emirates landed in Silicon Valley this month for an exclusive 10-day deep dive into America’s tech powerhouses.

These officials are getting behind-the-scenes access to unreleased technologies at eight major companies: Amazon, Google, IBM, Meta, Microsoft, NVIDIA, OpenAI, and Palantir.

The delegation, led by Mohammed bin Taliah, the UAE’s Chief of Government Services, represents every level of Emirati government. Each officer oversees AI adoption in their specific domain.

Tech Giants Open Their Labs to UAE Officials

What makes this mission unique is the level of access these companies are providing. Dr. Abdelrahman Al Mahmoud, director at the AI, Digital Economy and Remote Work Applications Office, revealed that UAE officials are seeing technologies that won’t hit the market for three to five years.

“We wanted to make sure that chief AI officers are not just waiting for products to come to the market and then figuring out how to use them. We are with them, looking at technologies that haven’t been released yet. Some of them nobody has seen so far.” Al Mahmoud told The National.

The companies have been “very generous” in showing unreleased innovations, he added. The UAE seeks to be among the first nations to pilot these next-generation technologies when they become available.

At Google’s headquarters, officials explored AI solutions for climate action, biodiversity monitoring, and satellite imaging. NVIDIA and IBM demonstrated advanced climate modeling systems and early warning technologies. Meta showcased tools for digital governance and public service delivery.

Beyond the Boardroom: Building Real Partnerships

Amal Abdulrahim, Chief AI Officer at the Ministry of Climate Change and Environment, described the experience as “eye-opening” and said officials were “privileged to experience some of their advanced AI solutions.“

The UAE delegation also participated in a major gathering organized by the US-UAE Business Council in San Francisco, where more than 180 executives and officials discussed technology collaboration and public-private partnerships.

“The delegation visit of UAE government AI leaders comes at a critical moment in the growing high tech and AI relationship between the US and the UAE,” said Danny Sebright, president of the US-UAE Business Council. He noted that the UAE is “quickly becoming the top global partner for the US” in AI development.

Government Officials Eye Immediate Implementation

Unlike typical study tours, this delegation is focused on immediate applications. Mohammed bin Taliah emphasized that adopting AI across government remains “a top national priority” for the UAE.

The officials are already identifying projects they can pursue quickly upon their return. Dr. Al Mahmoud said the first step will be a roundtable session where all 50 officers reconvene to share insights and determine next steps.

“The trip is happening so fast. We’re seeing so many companies, so many technologies, different approaches, but we also want to approach it from the point of view of a collective direction,” he explained.

Several memorandums of understanding are reportedly in development, though specific details remain confidential. Amal Abdulrahim confirmed that discussions are advancing with multiple companies, extending beyond climate change applications to other government sectors.

UAE’s Tech Future

The Silicon Valley mission represents the most extensive international outreach effort yet for the UAE’s AI leadership team. After visiting Meta, Google, OpenAI, Palantir, NVIDIA, and IBM in California, the delegation moved to Seattle for meetings with Amazon and Microsoft executives.

Dr. Mohamed Al Kuwaiti, Head of the UAE Government’s Cybersecurity Council, highlighted that international cooperation in cybersecurity and AI has become essential, not optional.

The initiative underscores the UAE’s strategy of positioning itself as a testing ground for emerging technologies. With its diverse population, rapidly growing economy, and complex environmental challenges, the country offers an ideal environment for piloting new AI applications.

As the delegation wraps up their Seattle visits, the focus shifts to implementation. The coming weeks will bring follow-up discussions, formal debriefings, and potentially new agreements that could reshape how the UAE government operates in the digital age.

While other nations debate AI policy, the UAE is actively learning from the source and preparing to implement tomorrow’s technologies today.

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