For years, the artificial intelligence arms race has largely revolved around a handful of U.S. tech giants buying massive amounts of Nvidia Corp (NASDAQ:NVDA) GPUs. Now, entire countries appear to be joining the queue.
The latest example came from HIVE Digital Technologies Ltd (NASDAQ:HIVE), which recently unveiled plans for a 320-megawatt sovereign AI infrastructure facility in Canada's Toronto-Waterloo corridor designed to host more than 100,000 GPUs at full build-out.
The proposed CAD 3.5 billion project — expected to go live in the second half of 2027 — would place HIVE's planned AI campus in the same broad scale category as some of the largest Nvidia-powered AI clusters currently being built by hyperscalers and frontier-model companies.
But the bigger takeaway may be that sovereign AI infrastructure is rapidly becoming a global trend.
The AI Infrastructure Race Is Turning Geopolitical
The first phase of the AI boom centered on companies like Microsoft Corp (NASDAQ:MSFT), Amazon.com, Inc. (NASDAQ:AMZN), Meta Platforms, Inc. (NASDAQ:META) and Alphabet Inc. (NASDAQ:GOOGL) (NASDAQ:GOOG) racing to secure Nvidia GPUs to train increasingly powerful AI models.
Then came Elon Musk's xAI (now SpaceXAI) and its Colossus supercluster in Memphis, which helped popularize the idea of giant 100,000-GPU-scale AI campuses.
Now, governments and sovereign-backed groups increasingly want their own versions.
- Saudi Arabia has partnered with Nvidia on sovereign AI "factory" initiatives as part of the kingdom's broader push to become a global AI hub.
- The United Arab Emirates has backed large-scale AI infrastructure projects tied to G42 and Stargate UAE, including plans involving roughly 100,000 Nvidia chips in initial deployment phases.
- France has also pushed aggressively into sovereign AI through support for Mistral AI and domestic compute infrastructure aimed at reducing reliance on U.S. hyperscalers.
- Norway, meanwhile, has emerged as another potential AI infrastructure hotspot tied to Nvidia-powered megacluster development.
- Countries including the UK, India and Japan have also accelerated efforts around domestic AI compute capacity, reflecting growing concerns that future economic and technological competitiveness may increasingly depend on access to large-scale AI infrastructure.
Nvidia May Quietly Be The Biggest Winner
Ironically, many sovereign AI ambitions still rely heavily on American technology — especially Nvidia GPUs.
That dynamic could become one of Nvidia's next major growth engines.
Instead of selling primarily to hyperscalers and AI startups, Nvidia increasingly sits at the center of a much broader infrastructure buildout involving:
- sovereign compute initiatives
- regional AI campuses
- national cloud strategies
- domestically governed supercomputing projects
In many ways, the AI race may no longer simply be about who builds the best chatbot.
It may increasingly be about which countries control the compute infrastructure powering the next generation of AI economies.
Image via Shutterstock
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