At the 2025 Annual Meetings of the African Development Bank (AfDB) held in Abidjan, a pivotal conversation unfolded around the future of artificial intelligence on the continent. In a side event jointly hosted by the AfDB and Google, stakeholders from government, academia, and the private sector convened to examine how AI can become a driver of Africa’s long-term growth and transformation. This discussion was framed within the context of the AfDB’s 2024–2033 Ten-Year Strategy, which emphasizes innovation, resilience, and inclusive economic development.
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The session, themed “The AI Revolution: How Will AI Support the Delivery of the AfDB’s 2024–2033 Ten-Year Strategy?”, signaled a clear move from policy design to implementation. The panel explored the foundational investments and cross-sector collaborations required to embed AI into the continent’s development trajectory. Emphasis was placed on the importance of data infrastructure, digital skills, regulatory frameworks, and the creation of culturally relevant AI systems.
One of the key challenges highlighted during the session was Africa’s limited role in the global AI data economy. With only 1.3% of global data storage capacity located on the continent, the need for investments in data centers, connectivity, and sovereign data governance frameworks is urgent. Addressing these gaps is seen as a prerequisite for building robust, localized AI systems that can serve African markets effectively and equitably.
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The panel also spotlighted the potential of Africa’s youthful population as a key advantage in the global AI race. However, turning this demographic strength into a digital dividend requires sustained investment in education, skills development, and innovation ecosystems. Several participants pointed to the importance of collaboration between governments, the private sector, and international partners to ensure Africa develops homegrown talent capable of designing and managing AI technologies.
In line with this, Google’s role in supporting AI research on the continent was presented as a model for partnerships that align technological expertise with local priorities. The company’s work in ethical AI, language modeling for underrepresented African languages, and support for research institutions has been part of a broader push to root AI development in local contexts.
The discussions also underscored the need for regional coordination. Fragmented regulatory approaches could undermine the scalability of AI solutions and create barriers to innovation. A harmonized policy framework, it was argued, would foster cross-border digital markets and encourage responsible AI deployment across diverse African economies.
As Africa enters a critical phase in its digital transformation, the engagement between the AfDB and global technology leaders like Google marks a significant step toward realizing the continent’s ambitions in artificial intelligence. The focus is now shifting from high-level strategies to the hard work of implementation, building the digital infrastructure, training the workforce, and designing inclusive systems that place African values and voices at the center of the AI revolution.
This collaboration represents not just a technological shift but a broader transformation in how development finance and innovation are being aligned to address the continent’s most pressing challenges.