Microsoft to open first Middle East cloud data centers in UAE

Microsoft to open first Middle East cloud data centers in UAE
The integration of the Abu Dhabi and Dubai data centers with Microsoft’s global cloud infrastructure is expected to connect regional businesses with global opportunities.
Updated 15 March 2018
Follow

Microsoft to open first Middle East cloud data centers in UAE

Microsoft to open first Middle East cloud data centers in UAE

Microsoft has revealed plans to deliver the intelligent, trusted Microsoft Cloud from its first data centers located in the Middle East. The move aims to empower organizations, governments, and businesses to achieve more and recognize the unprecedented opportunity for digital transformation in the region.
The Microsoft Cloud, comprising Azure, Office 365 and Dynamics 365, will offer enterprise-grade reliability and performance, combined with data residency, from data centers located in Abu Dhabi and Dubai with initial availability expected in 2019. Microsoft’s deep expertise in data protection, security and privacy, including the broadest set of compliance certifications in the industry, means customers in the region can accelerate their digital transformation knowing they have a trusted partner. Each new data center will adhere to Microsoft’s trusted cloud principles and becomes part of one of the largest cloud infrastructures in the world, already serving more than a billion customers and 20 million businesses.
“Today’s announcement marks the second data center expansion for Microsoft in the Middle East and Africa in less than a year,” said Samer Abu-Ltaif, president of Microsoft Middle East Africa. “The Microsoft data centers in South Africa, together with this expansion in the UAE, highlight our ongoing commitment to the region, where we have invested for more than 20 years. We see enormous opportunity in MEA for cloud technology to be the key driver of economic development, as well as provide sustainable solutions to many pressing issues such as youth employability, education and health care. We will continue to work with governments and organizations across the region to accelerate their digital transformation, and I am excited about the role that our new data centers will play in this transformation.”
Microsoft works closely with technology partners throughout the Middle East and Africa, facilitating training and increasing employability across many sectors. Approximately 4,000 start-ups have been supported through programs like the Microsoft Virtual Academy, and Microsoft’s Cloud Society initiative is helping people in the region build marketable skills, readying them for the digital jobs of the future. The integration of the Abu Dhabi and Dubai data centers with Microsoft’s global cloud infrastructure is expected to connect regional businesses with global opportunities, help accelerate new investments and job opportunities and improve access to cloud services for people and organizations across the Middle East.
Microsoft’s network of 17,800 partners across the region, has recently been bolstered by the new Cloud Solutions Provider program, creating a platform for partners to deliver Microsoft’s cloud solutions locally.