Geometric depiction of singapore city

Inside Singapore’s AI Ecosystem: The City-State That Out-Governed the Giants

How a city-state with no frontier model built Asia's most mature AI ecosystem, and won the first regional labs of OpenAI, Google DeepMind and Nvidia.

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The AI Map · Singapore

Inside Singapore’s AI Ecosystem: How a City-State Became Asia’s AI Hub

Singapore has no oil fund, a small population and a land area smaller than New York City. It built the most institutionally mature AI ecosystem in Asia anyway, then convinced OpenAI, Google DeepMind, Microsoft and Nvidia to plant their regional flags there. Here is how it happened, and what could undo it.

2017AI Singapore founded
S$300M+OpenAI’s first Applied AI Lab outside the US
1.4 GWNational data center capacity
~17%Digital economy share of GDP

Most countries in the global AI race sell one of two things. The United States and China sell frontier models and the compute to train them. The Gulf states sell sovereign capital and gigawatts of power. Singapore sells neither. It has no energy surplus, a resident population smaller than many Chinese cities and a land area of about 728 square kilometers, smaller than New York City. What it built instead is harder to copy: a reputation as the best-governed and most neutral place in Asia to build and run AI.

In May 2026 that positioning produced its clearest payoff yet. At the ATx Summit in Singapore, OpenAI announced OpenAI for Singapore, a partnership with the Ministry of Digital Development and Information backed by more than S$300 million. At its center sits the company’s first Applied AI Lab anywhere outside the United States. OpenAI has not opened an applied lab in London, Tokyo or Dubai. Singapore got the first one. At the same summit, Nvidia confirmed its first research lab in the country, and Google DeepMind deepened a national partnership it had begun months earlier. Three of the most consequential names in AI, all anchoring in a country with no model of its own at the frontier.

This is the story of how Singapore got there, what the ecosystem actually contains, and the constraints that could still cap its ambitions.

Part I

From Smart Nation to a national strategy

Singapore planned its way into AI deliberately, over more than a decade, and the paper trail is unusually clear. The groundwork was the Smart Nation initiative, launched in 2014 as a whole-of-government push to wire public services, transport and health around data. In 2019 the country published its first National AI Strategy, choosing a handful of national projects in areas like education, healthcare and border clearance to prove AI could deliver in the real world rather than in a lab.

The arrival of ChatGPT reset the ambition. In December 2023, then Deputy Prime Minister Lawrence Wong launched the second National AI Strategy, branded “AI for the Public Good, for Singapore and the World.” NAIS 2.0 moved the country from a set of flagship projects to a systems approach built around three systems, ten enablers and fifteen actions, and it reframed AI from a useful opportunity to a strategic necessity. In the 2024 budget cycle the government committed more than S$1 billion over five years to back the plan, covering compute, talent and industry adoption.

By 2026 the strategy had matured into governance machinery. In February the government set up a National AI Council chaired by Prime Minister Lawrence Wong. In May, at the ATx Summit, it released an update with ten refreshed priorities. Minister for Digital Development and Information Josephine Teo called it a double-click rather than a system reboot, with the real work now being the translation of strategy into four National AI Missions covering connectivity, advanced manufacturing, healthcare and finance.

A decade of Singapore AI policy and arrivals, 2014 to 2026
WhenMilestoneWhy it matters
2014Smart Nation launchedWhole-of-government push to build the data backbone everything later runs on.
Jan 2019Model AI Governance FrameworkAmong the world’s first practical, implementable AI governance guides.
2019First National AI StrategyFive national projects to prove AI in the real world.
May 2022AI Verify releasedFirst government-developed AI testing toolkit of its kind.
Dec 2023National AI Strategy 2.0Reframes AI as a strategic necessity: 3 systems, 10 enablers, 15 actions.
May 2024Gen AI Governance FrameworkNine dimensions, shaped by input from 70+ global organizations.
May 2024Green Data Centre RoadmapTrades efficiency for new compute capacity on a small grid.
Feb 2025Changi ISO/IEC 42001 certificateWorld’s first such certificate for airport customer services.
Jul 2025Microsoft Research Asia, SingaporeMicrosoft’s first research lab in Southeast Asia.
Aug 2025SEA-LION v4 (multimodal)First multimodal SEA-LION, built on Gemma 3, runs on a laptop.
Nov 2025Google DeepMind lab; Qwen-SEA-LION-v4DeepMind’s first SEA lab; new Qwen-based model tops SEA-HELM.
Jan 2026Agentic AI Governance FrameworkFirst-of-its-kind framework for AI that acts on a user’s behalf.
Feb 2026National AI CouncilCross-ministry direction, chaired by PM Lawrence Wong.
May 2026NAIS update; OpenAI & Nvidia labsOpenAI’s first applied lab outside the US; Nvidia’s first SG lab.
Part II

The maturity case: governance as a national product

If there is one thing Singapore exports that almost no other mid-sized country can match, it is AI governance that the rest of the world actually uses. In January 2019 the Personal Data Protection Commission released the first Model AI Governance Framework, among the first practical guidance anywhere. In May 2022 the Infocomm Media Development Authority released AI Verify, a testing toolkit built with companies including AWS, DBS, Google, Meta, Microsoft, Singapore Airlines and Standard Chartered. In 2023 it became the AI Verify Foundation, opening the work to the global open-source community.

The generative wave extended the model. The Model AI Governance Framework for Generative AI, published on 30 May 2024, set out nine dimensions and drew input from more than 70 global organizations, including OpenAI, Google, Microsoft and Anthropic. In January 2026 the IMDA added a Model AI Governance Framework for Agentic AI, a first-of-its-kind attempt to govern AI agents while keeping humans accountable.

The story has a proof point that travels. In February 2025, Changi Airport Group received an ISO/IEC 42001 certificate for its AI management system, issued by SGS and accredited by the Singapore Accreditation Council. SGS described it as the world’s first such certificate for airport customer services, covering five passenger and commercial AI applications.

Rather than competing to build the best model, Singapore made itself the place that writes the rules others adopt.
Part III

The sovereign model layer: SEA-LION and the regional play

Singapore does build models, but with a clear sense of where its leverage lies. The flagship is SEA-LION, short for Southeast Asian Languages in One Network, developed by AI Singapore. AISG dates to 2017, is supported by the National Research Foundation and is hosted by the National University of Singapore and Nanyang Technological University.

The project advanced sharply in 2025. In August it shipped SEA-LION v4, its first multimodal version, built on Google’s Gemma 3 (27B) and small enough to run on a consumer laptop. In November a second v4 model, built on Alibaba’s Qwen3-32B and supported by Alibaba Cloud, topped the regional SEA-HELM benchmark among open models under 200 billion parameters. Both are open source and distributed freely, including on Hugging Face and Google Cloud. SEA-LION is developed under the National Multimodal LLM Programme, an IMDA and National Research Foundation initiative.

Two things define both the strength and the limit. The strength is reach: earlier versions already feed downstream systems across the region, including Sahabat-AI, an Indonesian initiative that GoTo helped build on top of SEA-LION. The limit is provenance. SEA-LION is an adaptation layer on open foundation models from Google and Alibaba, not a sovereign model trained from scratch. That is a defensible choice for a small country, but it is a different proposition from the Gulf’s from-scratch Arabic models, and it should not be sold as the same thing. Deployment is real: NCS was the first to put SEA-LION v4 into production, in an internal assistant used by more than 10,000 of its staff across Asia-Pacific.

Part IV

The magnet: why the global labs all landed here

The most interesting feature of Singapore’s ecosystem is who chose to build there. In less than a year, four of the most important AI organizations on earth established or deepened a presence in the country, and the same word runs through all of them: first.

The foreign labs that anchored in Singapore
OrganizationWhenWhat landed
Microsoft Research Asia, SingaporeJul 2025Microsoft’s first research lab in Southeast Asia; works with NUS, NTU and SMU.
Google DeepMindNov 2025DeepMind’s first lab in Southeast Asia; a May 2026 national partnership followed.
OpenAI Applied AI LabMay 2026First Applied AI Lab outside the US; 200+ roles; backed by S$300M+.
Nvidia research labMay 2026First in Singapore, second in Asia-Pacific; embodied and efficient AI.
Amazon Web ServicesOngoingMultiyear, multibillion-dollar expansion of Singapore cloud infrastructure.

The timing is strategic. It is what a country earns when it offers regulatory clarity, political neutrality, deep English-language talent and trusted institutions in a region where AI demand is growing fast and the alternatives are less stable.

Part V

The companies: who is actually building

Singapore has no Mistral or Anthropic of its own. What it has is a layered base of applied AI companies, plus a willingness to host the frontier players it cannot grow itself. Crunchbase counts more than 1,400 AI companies headquartered in Singapore that have together raised over US$20 billion, yet the average one was founded only around 2019 and most are still early stage. Switch tiers below.

CompanyFieldNote
GrabSuper-appAI in demand forecasting, dynamic pricing, GrabPay fraud and GrabMaps.
Sea GroupCommerce / gaming / fintechShopee, Garena and SeaMoney embedding AI at scale.
PatSnapPatent & innovation intelligenceSingapore’s first NUS-backed unicorn after a US$300M round in 2021.
Advance Intelligence GroupFintech AIADVANCE.AI and Atome: credit scoring, identity, fraud across Asia.
CompanyFieldNote
ViSenzeVisual AIVisual search and image recognition for large retailers.
WIZ.AIConversational / voice AIMultilingual voice agents for banks, telcos and government.
TookitakiRegTechAI financial-crime and anti-money-laundering detection.
Silent EightRegTechAI for financial-crime and AML compliance.
SHIELDFraud / risk intelligenceDevice-first fraud AI; backed by Temasek and GGV; founded 2008 as CashShield.
AicadiumIndustrial computer visionTemasek-founded; absorbed responsible-AI startup BasisAI.
NCSAI services / deliveryFirst to run SEA-LION v4 in production internally.
TemusAI digital transformationTemasek and UST joint venture for enterprise and government.
EntityRoleNote
Punggol Digital District testbedIMDA, JTC, SITSingapore’s first large-scale physical AI testbed, opened May 2026.
Certis, DHL, Grab, QuikBotTestbed participantsTrialing delivery, cleaning and security robots beside human workers.
Centre for Intelligent RoboticsNew centreBrings in robotics firms such as Slamtec and Unitree.
CompanyFieldThe catch
BiofourmisHealth AIFounded in Singapore, later moved its headquarters to the US.
ManusGeneral-purpose AI agentChinese origins; relocated to Singapore in 2025.

The thinnest part of the ecosystem is its homegrown frontier layer, and the asterisk tier shows why: some winners scale and leave, and some “Singapore” AI companies are really just based there. Singapore is less focused on building the smartest model than on being the best place to put models, talent and companies to work.

Part VI

The hard constraints

Three constraints could still cap Singapore’s ambitions.

Power & land

More than 1.4 GW of data-center capacity on a small island with a small grid and a net-zero-by-2050 pledge. Compute will always be rationed here in a way it is not in Abu Dhabi or Texas.

Talent

A target of 15,000 AI practitioners by 2030 leans heavily on importing global talent and partnering with foreign labs. That works only as long as the country stays open and attractive.

Sovereignty

SEA-LION runs on open models from Google and Alibaba, the labs are foreign, and much of the frontier capability is owned elsewhere. The bet is that governance and deployment are durable leverage.

The Green Data Centre Roadmap, launched in May 2024, tries to square the circle by trading efficiency for capacity, targeting at least 300 megawatts of additional capacity and demanding power usage effectiveness below 1.3 for new builds. A pilot in 2023 awarded about 80 megawatts to Equinix, GDS, Microsoft and an AirTrunk-ByteDance consortium, and a second call for at least 200 megawatts closed in March 2026.

Part VII

What Singapore is betting on

Pull the ecosystem apart and the same three forces show up at every layer. The state is the architect: from Smart Nation to NAIS 2.0 to the National AI Council, almost everything traces back to a public agency setting direction. Governance is the product: AI Verify, the generative and agentic frameworks and the Changi certificate are the country’s most exportable assets. And neutrality is the strategy: as the US and Chinese AI blocs harden, Singapore has made itself the rare place where every camp will still share a room.

Two models for AI relevance: Singapore vs the Gulf
DimensionSingaporeGulf (UAE & Saudi)
Core betGovernance, neutrality, deploymentSovereign capital and compute
ModelsAdapts open models (Gemma, Qwen)From-scratch national models (Falcon, Jais, ALLaM)
ComputeRationed; land and power limitedAbundant; gigawatt-scale build-outs
EdgeTrust, rules, convening powerCapital, energy, scale

Whether that model can survive a genuine US-China rupture, scale its homegrown company layer beyond a handful of scaled names, and keep importing the talent it needs are the three questions the next 18 to 24 months will answer.

For now the result is hard to argue with. A country with no oil, no frontier model and little spare land convinced the most important AI company in the world to build its first overseas lab on its shores.

Sources & method

Researched and written by NervNow Editorial. Figures and milestones are drawn from primary sources including OpenAI, SGS, Singapore’s IMDA, MDDI, Smart Nation, the Economic Development Board, AI Singapore and the SEA-LION project, Microsoft Research and Google DeepMind, alongside primary press coverage, and reflect information available as of June 2026. Some figures are company-stated, including OpenAI’s investment commitment and Google DeepMind’s estimate of long-term economic value. Data-center capacity and the digital-economy share of GDP are approximate figures from secondary reporting. While every effort has been made to ensure accuracy, figures may vary across sources or change after publication. To flag a correction, write to editorial@nervnow.com.

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