AWS just made it meaningfully easier for AI systems to find and use real-world data. The company launched a dedicated Model Context Protocol server for its Registry of Open Data on AWS, giving AI agents, coding assistants, and conversational applications standardized access to more than 1,122 publicly available datasets hosted on AWS infrastructure.

The broader AWS MCP Server reached general availability on May 6, 2026, rolling out across key regions including Northern Virginia and Frankfurt. The RODA-specific server builds on that foundation, targeting a narrower and more specific use case: letting AI workflows tap into a curated catalog of public data without jumping through hoops.

What MCP actually is, and why it matters here

Model Context Protocol is essentially a handshake standard for AI. Instead of every AI tool building its own custom integration with every data source, MCP provides one common standard that works across the ecosystem.

AWS has now contributed to a network of more than 60 MCP servers across its product suite, with the protocol initially documented at modelcontextprotocol.io. The RODA server is the latest addition.