The depth of Western involvement raises questions about whose priorities shape Africa’s AI future
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The deal “looks like a good deal because then Rwandans are going to be trained and the government is going to be able to improve public service capacity.
Key facts
A $60 billion Africa AI Fund announced at the April 2025 Kigali Summit targets infrastructure, talent, and startups, including 12,000 Nvidia graphics processing units for centers in the Big Four
Africans comprise 18% of the world’s population, but the continent has less than 1% of global data center capacity, according to the World Economic Forum
In July 2024, the African Union released a Continental AI Strategy
Microsoft’s $1 billion data center with G42 Kenya stalled after the government held back from committing to the computing purchases the companies demanded
Summary
South Africa, Kenya, Nigeria, and Egypt are dependent on the West for AI infrastructure and funding. A $60 billion fund and an AI council aim to unite countries competing for investment. Africa’s AI sovereignty relies on governance, technical expertise, and political structures. Africa’s four biggest tech economies have each drafted artificial intelligence strategies admitting they depend too heavily on Google, Microsoft, Nvidia, and Meta for infrastructure and want more control over the terms. Nigeria, Egypt, and Kenya have released draft AI policies since January 2025 that identify dependence on U.S. tech companies as a threat to security and survival.