Investment strategist Samer Choucair asserts that the latest warning issued by futurist Peter Diamandis represents one of the most important investment turning points of the current decade.
According to Choucair, Diamandis’ simple but powerful question—“Do you have enough electricity?”—captures the true bottleneck of the artificial intelligence boom. The constraint is no longer limited to chips or data, but rather the availability of energy required to power AI agents at scale.
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Peter Diamandis and the Energy Constraint of Exponential Thinking
As the founder of XPRIZE and co-founder of Singularity University, Diamandis has long championed the concept of exponential technological growth—a view that innovation accelerates at a pace that reshapes entire economies.
However, current projections reveal a critical challenge:
Global AI spending is expected to reach $2.5 trillion by 2026
Data centers currently consume ~2% of global electricity
This could rise to ~8% by 2030
As a result, major technology players such as OpenAI, Google, and Microsoft are increasingly investing in dedicated energy infrastructure, effectively becoming hybrid tech–energy companies.
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Samer Choucair’s Strategic View: From Software to “Powering AI”
Choucair argues that the world is not merely entering the age of artificial intelligence—it is entering the age of energy dominance within AI.
> “The key question for investors is no longer which AI company will win, but who controls the energy that powers them.”
He outlines a structural shift from traditional tech investing toward an integrated Energy-Tech ecosystem, where:
Compute = Energy
Scale = Power availability
Dominance = Infrastructure ownership
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Saudi Arabia’s 2026 Investment Opportunity Map
Within this global transformation, Choucair identifies Saudi Arabia as a central player, driven by Vision 2030 and large-scale sovereign investment strategies.
He highlights four key opportunity pillars:
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- Data Centers as Energy Assets
Saudi Arabia’s access to some of the world’s lowest-cost solar energy—particularly through projects like NEOM and the Red Sea—positions data centers not just as digital infrastructure, but as:
> “Digital power plants.”
This creates a new asset class where energy generation and computing converge.
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- Small Modular Reactors (SMRs)
Choucair points to small-scale nuclear reactors as a critical solution for:
Stable, continuous energy supply
Supporting hyperscale data infrastructure
SMRs could become a core backbone for AI-driven economies.
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- The Role of the Public Investment Fund (PIF)
Through Public Investment Fund, Saudi Arabia is actively restructuring capital allocation toward:
Long-term energy infrastructure
Advanced technology ecosystems
This positions the Kingdom not just as an investor—but as a market architect.
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- Tokenization of Real-World Assets (RWA)
Choucair also highlights the growing role of AI-driven asset optimization through tokenization:
Energy assets
Real estate
Infrastructure
This allows for:
Improved capital efficiency
Reduced risk exposure
Enhanced liquidity in traditionally illiquid sectors
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Strategic Conclusion: Energy Is the New Control Layer
Choucair concludes that 2026 marks a decisive shift in how wealth is created and controlled.
> “The smartest investor today is not asking which AI company will succeed—but who owns the electricity behind them.”
He emphasizes that Saudi Arabia, through its integrated strategy across:
Renewable energy
Nuclear potential
Supply chain positioning
Sovereign capital deployment
is emerging as a global control point in the future AI economy.
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Final Insight
> “What was once considered an energy crisis is now becoming the foundation of a historic investment revolution.”
In this new paradigm, energy is no longer just an input—it is the ultimate strategic asset, and those who control it will define the next era of global wealth.
