A high-capacity data center facility near Amman linked to the NUJŪM16 initiative.
A proposed 100MW data center near Amman, presented as part of the NUJŪM16 initiative, is being positioned as a “sovereign AI factory” built to keep sensitive national workloads under Jordanian jurisdiction. The project reflects a wider regional push to treat compute and data residency as strategic infrastructure, not just IT capacity.
What “sovereign” means in practice
Project framing centers on hosting “National AI” workloads on infrastructure governed by local rules, procurement, and security controls, rather than relying on foreign cloud jurisdictions for critical systems.
The “data embassy” model
By borrowing the logic of data embassies, the facility is pitched as insulating high-value datasets from extraterritorial legal exposure, including risks tied to overseas enforcement and disclosure regimes.
Why it matters for the Levant
If executed at scale, Amman could market itself as a high-security compute hub for government and enterprise users across the Levant—competing on compliance, jurisdiction, and resilience as much as price.


