Saudi Arabia became the first country to pilot the World Economic Forum’s Quantum Economy Blueprint, translating a global strategic framework into a national action plan. The initiative, led by the Centre for the Fourth Industrial Revolution (C4IR) Saudi Arabia, aimed to explore how quantum technologies can support national ambitions while strengthening collaboration across government, academia, and industry. It also resulted in several analytical outputs that mapped the country’s emerging quantum ecosystem and identified pathways for development.
A key outcome of the pilot was the importance of aligning quantum strategies with national priorities such as economic diversification, security, and long-term technological leadership. The experience showed that embedding quantum initiatives within broader national development agendas, such as Vision 2030, helps secure stronger institutional support and sustained policy attention, ensuring that efforts remain relevant even as government priorities evolve.
Another important insight was the need to connect scientific research with real-world market applications. The pilot highlighted that quantum innovation delivers economic value only when research is closely aligned with industry needs. Early involvement from major private sector players helped validate use cases, reduce investment risks, and encourage collaboration, while governments can further support this by acting as early adopters and creating demand through procurement.
The initiative also demonstrated that countries do not need to fully own quantum hardware infrastructure to participate effectively in the quantum economy. Instead, strategic access through international partnerships, cloud platforms, and targeted investments can enable meaningful engagement. This flexible approach allows nations to build strengths in specific parts of the quantum value chain without requiring complete technological self-sufficiency.
A further lesson was the importance of building strong multistakeholder ecosystems from the outset. Bringing together government, industry, and academia helped create shared understanding, improve coordination, and build trust across institutions. Structured collaboration mechanisms ensured alignment of priorities and transformed fragmented efforts into a more unified and sustainable national quantum strategy.
Finally, the pilot underscored that human capital is the most critical factor in quantum development. Success in the quantum economy depends on developing a skilled and diverse workforce that spans technical, scientific, policy, and business disciplines. Beyond technical expertise, soft skills such as communication, ethics, and strategic thinking are essential for translating innovation into impact, making education and talent development central to long-term competitiveness.
Overall, Saudi Arabia’s experience shows that global frameworks like the Quantum Economy Blueprint can be effectively adapted into national strategies. It highlights that progress in the quantum economy will depend not only on technology, but also on collaboration, talent development, and alignment with national priorities, enabling countries to move from conceptual planning to real-world implementation.







