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Business & Economy

Africa’s Digital Economy Enters ‘Compute Era’ as Cloud and AI Demand Surges – IFC

BrandiQ Analyst
Last updated: March 25, 2026 8:12 pm
BrandiQ Analyst
March 25, 2026
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7 Min Read
africa's digital economy
Obinna Isiadinso
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Africa’s digital economy is undergoing a structural shift – from a decade defined by connectivity gaps to a new phase where computing power, not internet access, is emerging as the primary constraint, according to the International Finance Corporation (IFC).

Speaking at the Africa Hyperscalers Conversation: A Global View session, Obinna Isiadinso, IFC’s Global Sector Lead for Data Centres and Cloud Investments, said the continent must urgently scale its compute infrastructure – data centres, cloud platforms, and processing capacity – to sustain digital transformation and unlock artificial intelligence (AI)-driven growth.

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“Digital infrastructure is no longer discretionary. It has become fundamental to economic competitiveness,” Isiadinso stated.

From Connectivity to Compute: A Strategic Inflection Point

For much of the past decade, Africa’s digital narrative revolved around bridging connectivity gaps through subsea cables and fibre expansion. That phase delivered measurable gains in internet penetration and access.

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However, as businesses, governments, and startups increasingly adopt cloud computing and AI applications, the constraint has shifted upstream – rom access to processing power.

Across a population of nearly 1.4 billion people, Africa currently operates with approximately 500 megawatts of installed data centre capacity – less than one per cent of global supply. This stark imbalance highlights a widening infrastructure deficit at a time when demand for local data processing is accelerating.

From a strategic standpoint, this transition mirrors global trends where hyperscale cloud providers are investing tens of billions of dollars annually to support AI workloads. The implication for Africa is clear: countries that fail to build compute capacity risk becoming passive consumers rather than creators of digital value.

Energy: The New Bottleneck in Africa’s Digital Growth

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While connectivity constraints are easing, a more fundamental challenge has emerged—energy reliability.

According to Isiadinso, stable and predictable electricity supply is now the single most critical factor shaping data centre investment decisions across emerging markets.

“Reliable electricity is the single most important constraint affecting data centre expansion,” he noted.

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This challenge is not unique to Africa. Mature markets in Europe and North America are also experiencing grid pressure due to the explosive energy demands of AI infrastructure. However, for African economies still building foundational capacity, the implications are more acute.

To mitigate this, developers are increasingly deploying hybrid energy strategies, including:

  • Gas-to-power solutions
  • Renewable energy integration
  • Private power purchase agreements (PPAs)

These models are becoming essential to de-risk large-scale infrastructure investments and ensure operational continuity.

The Role of Anchor Tenants in Unlocking Investment

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Beyond power constraints, financing digital infrastructure at scale depends heavily on securing long-term demand certainty.

This is where “anchor tenants” – large customers such as hyperscale cloud providers, telecom operators, and government institutions – play a decisive role.

“Anchor tenants provide predictable revenue streams that reduce investment risk,” Isiadinso explained.

In practical terms, this means that government digitisation programmes and enterprise cloud adoption could act as catalysts for unlocking billions in infrastructure investment. When public services migrate to the cloud or require local data hosting, they create stable demand signals that make projects bankable.

AI Opportunity: Why Africa Can Leapfrog in Inference Infrastructure

While Africa may not immediately compete with global hubs in hosting large-scale AI training clusters – given their massive energy requirements – the continent is well-positioned in another critical segment: AI inference infrastructure.

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Inference refers to the deployment of AI models in real-world applications such as:

  • Language processing
  • Financial automation
  • Recommendation engines
  • Real-time analytics

Unlike training systems, inference infrastructure is distributed, less energy-intensive, and closer to end-users, making it highly relevant for African markets.

“As digital services expand across the continent, demand for localised inference capacity will increase,” Isiadinso said.

This creates a strategic opening for African data centre operators to build regionally distributed compute hubs, enabling faster, more efficient digital services.

Capital Gap: Why Africa Must Mobilise Domestic Investment

A critical but often overlooked dimension of Africa’s digital infrastructure challenge is financing.

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Despite the rapid growth of pension funds and institutional capital pools across the continent, allocation to digital infrastructure remains limited.

According to IFC, unlocking this capital will require:

  • Stronger regulatory frameworks
  • Risk mitigation mechanisms
  • Increased investor awareness of digital infrastructure as an asset class

“With appropriate regulatory frameworks… these funds could become important sources of long-term capital,” Isiadinso noted.

This represents a significant opportunity. If mobilised effectively, local capital could reduce reliance on foreign investment while accelerating infrastructure deployment at scale.

Global Competition: Policy, Power, and Predictability

At a global level, hyperscale investment is increasingly flowing toward markets that offer:

  • Energy reliability
  • Regulatory clarity
  • Investment stability

In this context, Africa’s ability to compete for the next wave of digital infrastructure investment will depend on coordinated policy action across energy, finance, and digital regulation.

Countries that align these elements will not only attract capital but also position themselves as regional digital hubs.

Strategic Outlook: Who Owns the Future of Africa’s Digital Value Chain?

Africa’s digital foundation is improving – supported by expanding connectivity, rising enterprise adoption, and growing investor interest. However, the next phase of growth will be defined by who controls the infrastructure where digital value is created.

“Infrastructure determines where digital value is created,” Isiadinso emphasised.

The strategic implication is profound:

  • Without local compute capacity, Africa risks exporting its data and importing its digital services
  • With it, the continent can capture value, create jobs, and build globally competitive technology ecosystems.

BrandiQ Insight

Africa is no longer in a connectivity race – it is in a compute race.

The winners will not be those who simply expand access to the internet, but those who build the infrastructure that powers:

  • AI
  • Cloud computing
  • Digital economies

For policymakers, investors, and technology leaders, the message is clear: The future of Africa’s digital economy will be determined not by bandwidth – but by processing power.

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