Mobily showcases global achievements at Capacity 2023

Mobily’s pavilion at the three-day Capacity Middle East 2023 conference in Dubai. The event, held from March 7-9, was attended by more than 2,000 ICT professionals and industry leaders.
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Updated 14 March 2023
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Mobily showcases global achievements at Capacity 2023

Mobily highlighted its recent achievements during the Capacity Middle East 2023 conference, the region’s leading meeting for the digital infrastructure industry.
More than 2,000 ICT professionals and industry leaders attended the three-day event in Dubai, with delegates hearing firsthand how Mobily is helping to transform the region’s communications landscape for the 21st century.
As a diamond sponsor for the event, Mobily had a number of participants taking part in discussions and talks during the course of the conference.
The talks included topics such as network upgrades vs network modernization — the notion of putting in increased capacity across the region against bringing together and optimizing different technologies as well as peering, and how internet exchange points have transformed Middle Eastern interconnectivity.

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Mobily’s focus on carrier neutrality has resulted in its partnership with Equinix, a top-tier and the largest global data center and internet exchange platform provider.

Thamer Alfadda, SVP, Mobily wholesale, said: “We are delighted to have taken part in this event as it showcases the remarkable progress we have made as a company in recent years. To get to where we are now, we have had to take a holistic view of where the industry was and leverage our expertise, assets and solutions to enable further growth of the digital economy. As a result, we have partnered with industry-leading organizations and companies to push the Kingdom and wider region’s digital infrastructure to the next level.”
For this to be made possible, the company has focused on becoming a premier digital enabler and is now one of the largest wholesale and carrier providers with national and international footprint.
Mobily maintains full connectivity solutions with reliable secure networks that cover its local and international networks, global PoPs, submarine cable systems through various land stations, neutral JED1 IX and data centers.
These investments form important pillars under Mobily’s digital hub, which seeks to create a holistic communications ecosystem deploying a number of different technologies and solutions to meet the growing demand for innovative services.
This is built upon a range of achievements that include the JED1 IX international internet exchange, which is helping to fuel the region’s digital economy while also enhancing the experience of internet users. The JED1 IX acts as a neutral interconnection hub, which makes it the ideal commercial choice for global and regional internet service providers, operators, OTTs, content providers, and enterprises to land and peer in Jeddah, making it a significant gateway for traffic, which in turn positions Saudi Arabia as a digital hub between Europe, Asia and Africa, and aims to improve the peering ecosystem in the region.
Central to this approach is Mobily’s focus on carrier neutrality, which is why the company recently partnered
with Equinix, a top-tier and the largest global data center and internet exchange platform provider. This enables the establishment of full carrier-neutral internet exchange in the JED1 datacenter facility.

 


World Defense Show 2026: KPMG highlights human capital as strategic defense asset

Updated 03 February 2026
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World Defense Show 2026: KPMG highlights human capital as strategic defense asset

KPMG published a series of four white papers as official knowledge partner for the World Defense Show 2026, reinforcing its commitment to supporting Saudi Arabia’s Vision 2030 and the Kingdom’s ambition to build a sovereign, future-ready defense ecosystem grounded in integrated capability development, localization, and digital readiness.

As global defense priorities evolve from procurement-led models toward capability-driven ecosystems, one of the papers in the defense integration series highlights a clear inflection point for the sector. According to KPMG analysis, defense localization in Saudi Arabia has increased from around 4 percent in 2018 to 24.9 percent in 2024, with the Kingdom targeting 50 percent localization by 2030. At the same time, local content across the defense sector has reached 40.7 percent, up from 38.4 percent in 2023, reflecting deeper integration across procurement, industrial participation, technology adoption, and workforce development.

KPMG’s findings emphasize that modern defense power is no longer defined by platforms and equipment alone, but by the ability to design, operate, integrate, and sustain advanced systems at scale. While technology, infrastructure, and capital investment remain critical enablers, the firm’s WDS position paper highlights that defense transformation has a significant human-capital focus, recognizing that skills, data literacy, and local expertise are essential to maximizing the performance, resilience, and sovereignty of advanced defense capabilities.

Christopher Moore, head of defense and security, said: “Saudi Arabia’s defense transformation has a significant human-capital focus, alongside major investments in technology, equipment, and industrial capacity. The progress we are seeing in localization and local content demonstrates that the Kingdom is not only acquiring advanced systems, but also building the skills, institutions, and operating models required to sustain them. Through our partnership with the World Defense Show, KPMG is proud to contribute insight and frameworks that help translate Vision 2030 ambition into operational readiness.”

This human-capital perspective forms part of a broader KPMG defense thought-leadership series developed for WDS 2026, which examines defense transformation through multiple, interconnected pillars. These include accelerating sovereign defense ecosystems, integrating business and technology infrastructure, financing future deterrence through public-private partnerships, strengthening industrial and technological autonomy, and building a future-ready defense workforce — reflecting KPMG’s holistic view of defense as an integrated national ecosystem.

KPMG’s research also situates Saudi Arabia’s progress within a global economic context. International benchmarks cited in the firm’s WDS analysis show that every $1 billion in defense manufacturing output in the US supports approximately 5,700 jobs, while the UK defense sector contributes around £25 billion ($34.2 billion) to GDP and sustains 260,000 skilled jobs. Across the EU, defense industries employ more than 1.6 million people and generate approximately 70 billion euros ($82.9 billion) in annual value. KPMG notes that similar dynamics are beginning to emerge in Saudi Arabia as localization accelerates and private-sector participation expands.

To support measurable progress, KPMG has proposed a Defense Workforce Capability Index — a framework that links workforce outcomes directly to operational readiness. The index tracks localization rates, technical qualification levels in advanced and digital systems, and the share of maintenance and sustainment conducted domestically, aligning human-capital metrics with broader defense performance objectives.

Taking place in Riyadh from Feb. 8 to 12, the World Defense Show will bring together senior government leaders, defense manufacturers, and technology innovators from around the world. The other three papers in the defense integration series focus on sovereignty, financing and technology.