On January 14, 2026, the U.S. Department of State officially welcomed the United Arab Emirates (UAE) as the ninth signatory to the Pax Silica Declaration — the first-ever international coalition explicitly organized around the strategic assets of the AI age: compute (processing power), silicon (semiconductors), critical minerals, and energy infrastructure.
The signing ceremony took place between U.S. Under Secretary of State for Economic Affairs Jacob Helberg and UAE Minister of State Saeed Bin Mubarak Al Hajeri. This move transforms the UAE from an observer/partner into a full member of what is rapidly becoming one of the most significant geopolitical and technological alliances of the 2020s.
Current Pax Silica Signatories (as of January 2026)
- United States
- Australia
- Israel
- Japan
- Republic of Korea (South Korea)
- Qatar
- Singapore
- United Kingdom
- United Arab Emirates (newest member)
India is expected to become the tenth signatory in February 2026.
Core Objectives of Pax Silica
The declaration is deliberately framed as a positive-sum partnership — a coalition designed to keep participating nations competitive and prosperous in an era where technological sovereignty increasingly determines economic and national security.
Key shared goals include:
- Building secure, diversified, and trusted technology ecosystems
- Reducing coercive dependencies and single points of failure in global supply chains
- Joint flagship projects across the full technology stack, including:
• 6G connectivity and edge infrastructure
• Next-generation compute & hyperscale data centers
• Advanced semiconductor manufacturing
• Critical mineral refining & processing
• Secure logistics chains
• Reliable, clean energy supply for AI workloads
The UAE brings massive strengths to the table: tens of billions invested in AI infrastructure (G42, MGX, Falcon models), world-class energy capacity (solar + nuclear), strategic geographic position, and a proven track record of rapid execution on Vision 2030 diversification goals.
Geopolitical & Economic Significance
This is not just another tech partnership — it is a clear realignment signal:
For the United States
The UAE is now a critical non-Asian alternative for scaling AI compute, semiconductor packaging/testing, and energy-intensive data-center operations — reducing strategic vulnerability to Taiwan/South Korea and Chinese supply chains.
For the UAE
Joining Pax Silica accelerates Abu Dhabi’s ambition to become one of the top 5–10 global AI & compute hubs by 2035, while deepening security ties with Washington and gaining preferred access to Western technology ecosystems.
Broader message
The coalition now includes three Gulf states (Qatar, UAE, and very likely Saudi Arabia next). This creates a powerful new axis:
USA + liberal democracies + wealthy Gulf monarchies vs. the expanding China–Russia–Iran technology sphere.
Implications for Global Tech Landscape (2026–2030 Outlook)
- Supply-chain re-architecture — Expect accelerated diversification of gallium, germanium, rare-earth processing, advanced packaging, and HPC energy supply away from China.
- Joint 6G & edge standards — Pax Silica members will likely push for a Western-aligned 6G ecosystem.
- Massive capital flows — Gulf sovereign funds (PIF, Mubadala, ADQ, MGX) will inject tens to hundreds of billions into U.S./allied AI infrastructure.
- Fragmentation risk — The world is visibly splitting into two competing technology blocs, with neutral countries (India, Brazil, Indonesia, Turkey) facing increasing pressure to choose sides.
Critical Perspective
While Pax Silica is being presented as a “positive-sum” partnership, skeptics point out several risks:
- Heavy dependence on authoritarian Gulf capital raises long-term governance and values questions.
- The coalition still lacks continental European heavyweights (Germany, France, Netherlands) — a potential weakness.
- China will almost certainly respond with even larger subsidies for its own parallel ecosystem (Made in China 2025 ? 2.0).
Nonetheless, January 14, 2026 marks a historic inflection point: For the first time, major nations are formally treating compute, silicon, minerals, and energy as shared strategic assets on par with oil in the 20th century.
The Pax Silica Declaration is no longer a concept — it is an operational geopolitical reality with rapidly growing membership and money behind it.
