Microsoft · South Korea · Huawei · IEEE Spectrum AI
At the same time, Microsoft released is set to spend ZAR 5.4 billion ($300 million) by the end of 2027
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According to one analysis, the country’s data-center market was valued at US $2.16 billion in 2024, the largest in Africa.
Key facts
- At the same time, Microsoft announced plans to spend ZAR 5.4 billion ($300 million) by the end of 2027 on cloud and AI infrastructure in South Africa, building on a prior ZAR 20.4 billion investment
- According to one analysis, the country’s data-center market was valued at US $2.16 billion in 2024, the largest in Africa
- If Microsoft’s $300 million investment and Huawei’s infrastructure expansion proceed on standard commercial terms, as they are currently, it normalizes extractive AI infrastructure
- But a parallel process remains live: the National Treasury’s Draft General Public Procurement Regulations —the legal instrument that will govern every government AI contract—closes for comment
Summary
South Africa is a mining superpower, which should help it shape its AI future. This article is adapted by the author with permission from Tech Policy Press. South Africa is not another developing country struggling to govern artificial intelligence; it is the exception with leverage, and the window to act on it is closing. It holds approximately 88 percent of global platinum-group metal reserves, critical inputs to parts of the semiconductor and data-center supply chains that make AI infrastructure possible. In physics, leverage requires three things: a fulcrum, a lever arm, and the ability to apply force. The unresolved “OPTION” provisions in the policy are where force would be applied. This makes South Africa a global test case. But the deeper failure is not that an AI policy contained bad references.