Saudi Aramco and Amazon Web Services (AWS) have announced a multi-year cloud transformation partnership that will migrate Saudi Aramco’s oilfield operations, reservoir management systems, and upstream data infrastructure to AWS’s cloud platform. The deal, valued at USD 2.5 billion over seven years, is one of the largest cloud services contracts in the history of the oil and gas industry.
Scope of the Digital Oilfield Programme
Saudi Aramco currently operates more than 300 onshore and offshore oil and gas fields across the Kingdom, generating petabytes of seismic, reservoir, and production data daily. The AWS partnership will consolidate this data into a unified cloud environment, enabling real-time analytics, predictive maintenance algorithms, and AI-driven reservoir simulation at a scale previously impossible with on-premises infrastructure.
In practical terms, the migration will allow Aramco’s reservoir engineers to run complex fluid flow simulations in hours rather than weeks, dramatically accelerating field development planning. AWS’s machine learning tools will also be deployed to optimise enhanced oil recovery (EOR) operations — a critical capability as Aramco manages mature fields where maximising recovery rates is a top engineering priority.
AWS Infrastructure in Saudi Arabia
AWS launched its Middle East (UAE) Region in 2022 and its AWS Middle East (Bahrain) Region in 2019. The Aramco partnership, however, will primarily run on the Saudi Arabia Region that AWS has committed to establishing by 2026, with two availability zones in Riyadh and one in the Eastern Province — the heart of the Kingdom’s oil and gas infrastructure. Data residency within Saudi Arabia is a non-negotiable requirement for Saudi Aramco, driven by both security policy and alignment with the National Data Management Office (NDMO) regulations.
Local Employment and ICV Commitments
Under the partnership’s In-Kingdom Value (IKV) commitments, AWS has pledged to create more than 2,000 technology jobs in Saudi Arabia by 2028, including cloud architects, data engineers, and DevOps specialists. AWS will also fund 10,000 cloud skills training certifications for Saudi nationals through its AWS Academy and re/Start programmes in partnership with local universities.
For the Saudi B2B technology sector, the Aramco-AWS partnership creates a downstream market for systems integrators, data management consultancies, and software developers who can build applications on the Aramco cloud platform. AWS Partners certified for oil and gas workloads will have preferred access to Aramco’s third-party software procurement budget, estimated at USD 400 million annually.
Competitive Context: Oil Majors and Cloud Adoption
Saudi Aramco’s move mirrors similar cloud transformation programmes at BP (partnered with Google Cloud), Shell (partnered with Microsoft Azure), and Abu Dhabi’s ADNOC (partnered with Microsoft Azure for its industrial IoT programme). The Aramco-AWS deal is notably larger in financial terms and broader in scope, reflecting Aramco’s ambition to build one of the world’s most data-sophisticated oil and gas operations.
Industry observers note that cloud adoption in the energy sector has historically lagged behind financial services and retail due to concerns about operational technology (OT) security and data sovereignty. Saudi Aramco’s commitment to a fully cloud-native oilfield operation is expected to accelerate cloud adoption across GCC national oil companies, including QatarEnergy, ADNOC, and Kuwait Petroleum Corporation.
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