Pakistan now has its first sovereign AI cloud, as Telenor Pakistan and Data Vault Pakistan have announced a strategic partnership to deliver GPU-accelerated computing and locally hosted AI infrastructure entirely within the country’s borders. The platform is immediately open for enterprise onboarding and marks a significant step in Pakistan’s shift from consuming global AI services to building its own.
What Is the Telenor and Data Vault Sovereign AI Cloud?
The alliance creates a compliant, high-performance cloud environment where AI training, inference, and data processing never leave Pakistani soil. Hosted inside Data Vault’s high-density AI data centre, the platform is designed to meet regulatory requirements from the State Bank of Pakistan and the Pakistan Telecommunication Authority, removing the need for sensitive data, including financial records, healthcare imaging, and government datasets, to be processed offshore.
The sovereign AI cloud addresses a long-standing gap. Pakistani enterprises and public institutions previously depended on overseas cloud regions for demanding AI workloads, raising serious concerns around data sovereignty and regulatory compliance. This partnership is designed to close that gap in one move.
GPU-as-a-Service Now Available to Pakistani Enterprises
Global GPU shortages have slowed AI adoption across Pakistani industries for years. Through this partnership, Telenor customers gain on-demand access to GPU-as-a-Service powered by NVIDIA-grade accelerators. The offering enables organisations to train and deploy machine learning models, run real-time computer vision systems, build Urdu and regional-language large language models, and support fintech fraud detection and anti-money laundering automation.
Industrial users can also run predictive maintenance workloads and enterprise-grade generative AI applications at lower latency and reduced bandwidth costs compared to routing traffic to foreign hyperscalers.
Sovereign AI Cloud Targets Finance, Health, Agriculture and Government
The platform is positioned to serve a wide range of sectors. Financial institutions can process transaction data locally without cross-border exposure. Healthcare providers can run diagnostic imaging AI on patient records that remain within national jurisdiction. Agri-tech firms, logistics companies, and smart city projects can deploy specialised models built on local data.
Researchers and universities also stand to benefit. The availability of local GPU compute means Pakistani academics can now develop national large language models for Urdu and regional languages, a capability that was economically out of reach for most institutions before.
“This alliance positions Pakistan among the nations building their own sovereign AI future,” a Telenor Pakistan spokesperson said. “Enterprises can now innovate knowing their data and AI systems remain secure, local, and compliant.”
The People Behind the Initiative
Both organisations credited a core team for shaping the alliance, including Mansoor Ahmed, Hasrat Mehmood, Ahmed Jahangir Chohan, Muhammad Ali Khan, Amna Ayub, Muhammad Umer Hayat, Syed Zeeshan Ali, Muhammad Adeel, and Fahad Alam. Special recognition went to Mehwish Salman Ali, Founder and CEO of Data Vault Pakistan, whose work building high-density GPU infrastructure and a sovereign cloud architecture created the technical foundation for the project.
Pakistan Joins a Global Trend in AI Sovereignty
Pakistan’s move follows similar investments in Saudi Arabia, the UAE, Turkey, and Singapore, markets that have prioritised digital sovereignty as AI becomes critical national infrastructure. Analysts view the Telenor and Data Vault deal as a comparable strategic investment at a national level.
The sovereign AI cloud delivers several practical advantages for the local market: high-performance compute at accessible price points, reduced dependency on foreign cloud providers, stronger cybersecurity posture through local access controls and auditability, and lower overall costs for AI deployment across industries.
A Data Vault representative summed up the ambition: “This is not just a business alliance. It is a cornerstone of a sovereign, innovation-driven AI ecosystem for Pakistan.”
What Comes Next
Telenor and Data Vault plan to co-develop industry-specific AI applications in fintech, healthcare, telecom automation, agri-tech, and smart governance. As more enterprises onboard, the platform is expected to grow into a foundational layer of Pakistan’s digital economy, providing the infrastructure that startups, corporations, and public institutions need to build and run production AI systems at scale.










