Africa is unified in its data centre ambition – but transmission and fragmentation could derail its US$1.5 trillion digital economy potential.
As cross-continental digitalisation developments converge to forge tomorrow’s AI economy, Africa today is united in its ambition to become a thriving, technologically empowered market where world-class digital infrastructure yields unprecedented socio-economic returns.
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At the forefront of this shared pursuit stands a central catalyst: data centres, the physical environments engineered to support the compute, storage, and network systems that drive end-to-end data flow.
Data centres are more than strategic priorities
Yet these purpose-built facilities are more than strategic priorities for countries both regionally and globally. They are indispensable assets: the connective tissue of a modern digital economy and the foundational engines of ‘Intelligence Age’ innovation and productivity – critical for Africa to scale its digital economy, deliver AI capability, and compete globally.
Such outcomes are credible possibilities rather than fringe improbabilities, a statement substantiated by several compelling statistics. For instance, the African data centre market is projected to reach US$6.81 billion in 2030, almost doubling from US$3.49 billion in 2024 at a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 11.8%.
Because AI cannot function at scale without data centres, the African AI market is equally noteworthy. Valued at US$4.51 billion in 2025, the region’s AI market volume could exceed US$16.5 billion by 2030 at a CAGR of 27.42% – illustrating the potentially immense influence and impact of data centres.
Challenges precede opportunities in Africa’s persistent structural hurdles
Challenges do, however, precede the opportunities, with transmission among the continent’s most persistent structural hurdles. It’s a barrier impeding critical AI infrastructure acceleration – and one that could derail Africa’s quest for global competitiveness.
This is the view of Dr. Krishnan Ranganath, Regional Executive – West Africa at Africa Data Centres (ADC), Africa’s largest network of interconnected, carrier- and cloud-neutral data centre facilities. With over three decades’ experience in the data centre, cloud, connectivity, and managed IT services industries, few are more qualified to discuss Africa’s existing data centre landscape.
“Transmission fundamentals are not in place across the region. It’s a common problem and one of our biggest challenges – whether this be transmission of power or internet bandwidth,” Dr. Ranganath revealed.
Building data centres is the easiest thing – but they must be connected
“Power is generated in abundance across Africa, but transmission lines are old and problems surrounding grids, terrestrial fibres, and distribution persist. Building data centres is the easiest thing – but they must be connected.
“If facilities depend on substandard connectivity, or if connectivity costs are high while power availability remains low, they essentially become concrete blocks and do not solve the problem.
“Every country requires a robust network – and we must fix the fundamentals from the grassroots level up so that in five to 10 years, African infrastructure can converge.”
The intricacies impeding continental scaling
Besides outdated transmission infrastructure, fragmentation is – without a collective response and coordinated action – another issue destined to hinder envisaged data centre deployment. From disparate regulations to uneven market maturity and inconsistent cross-border standards, each could inflate costs, restrict scale, and dilute investor confidence.
Various African countries mandate strict data localisation and sovereignty standards, compelling organisations to process and store information domestically. Such regulatory divergence already drives up expenses and constrains growth.
Limited regional integration discourages cross-border investment
Regional integration efforts are subsequently undermined, limiting Africa’s ability to position itself as a recognised digital and AI hub amid a complex regulatory environment where deployment is curbed, cross-border investment discouraged, and developers restricted.
This confluence of factors – each a consequence of fragmentation – currently prevents the region from obtaining the scale, efficiency, and investment needed to compete globally. The region’s future digital ascension will, however, not be determined by data centres alone.
“The bigger picture – the bigger question – is how do we ensure Africa becomes 100% digitalised?” Dr. Ranganath continued. “
How do we construct a digital economy and a digital Africa? Data centres play a role in that, but we must focus on the whole digital ecosystem – networks, power, human capacity, customers, consumers. All tie into the wider digital economy.”
Collaboration could ignite and define Africa’s digital ascension
With Dr. Ranganath’s question in mind, another subsequently arises: can Africa overcome its divides to build a unified, scalable digital economy that competes on a truly global scale?
From Morocco and Kenya to Egypt, Nigeria, and South Africa, countries are rapidly accelerating their digital infrastructure roadmaps, courting hyperscalers, and positioning themselves for the impending AI economy as demands for AI, cloud, fintech, and more rise exponentially.
The region’s upward trajectory is also illustrated through notable projections. Africa’s cloud computing market has been tipped to reach US$45 billion by 2031, its fintech market US$65 billion by 2030, and the regional digital economy US$1.5 trillion by 2030.
Momentum alone will not transition Africa’s data centre and digital economy
However, momentum alone will not be enough to transition Africa’s data centre and digital economy ambitions to reality. Fragmentation – in rules, standards, readiness, and market maturity – does not merely risk creating isolated pockets of progress rather than a cohesive continental ecosystem. It threatens to derail Africa’s plans and potential altogether.
For Dr. Ranganath, a logical next step arises – one that could lay essential foundations for a future where Africa’s coordinated digital rise takes flight.
“We have to believe all African nations can work together as one, because without this belief, it will not happen,” he added. “Theoretically, it can happen. But practically? It is possible – perhaps not on such a large scale right away – but we can begin in a different way.

Dr. Krishnan Ranganath, Regional Executive – West Africa at ADC
“No president will say ‘no’ when it comes to the development of their own country. Rather than standards and regulations per each individual country, we need national leaders coming together to establish guidelines and the most prudent way forward.
“If nations in the North, South, East, and West are aligned and 8–10 countries in four different regions are collaborating from within, progress toward a unified Africa would be made while all the various trade associations and relevant commissions collaborate.
“We need to find a way – and it is high time.”
Data Centre Intelligent Infrastructure is mission control for Africa’s future economy. It is the continental arena where international tech leaders and regional visionaries converge to architect the continent’s digital future. From sovereignty to hyperscale builds to local cloud ecosystems, it is tackling Africa’s most urgent infrastructure challenges head-on. Together, we are forging the digital backbone of a new Africa. Meet us in Marrakech, Morocco, 7-9 April 2026.





























