East Africa’s AI Infrastructure Push Takes Centre Stage at GITEX Kenya


Kenya’s first Oracle Cloud Infrastructure region will be hosted in Nairobi, iXAfrica Data Centres confirmed on Wednesday, in the headline announcement of day two of AI EVERYTHING KENYA X GITEX KENYA 2026 at the Kenyatta International Convention Centre (KICC).

The partnership between iXAfrica, East Africa’s first hyperscale AI-ready data centre operator, and Oracle marks a significant expansion of cloud infrastructure on the continent. “For Kenya and East Africa, this is a strategic shift,” said iXAfrica CEO Snehar Shah. “Local cloud and data centre infrastructure strengthens data residency, improves resilience, and supports lower-latency digital services.”

The announcement came as the three-day event, organised by inD in partnership with Kenya’s Office of the Special Envoy on Technology, entered its expo phase, with more than 280 enterprises and startups from 75 countries exhibiting at KICC. The event has attracted 100 investors managing a combined US$50 billion in assets under management.

A high-level panel hosted by Kenyan digital innovation firm Qhala and Open Society Foundations confronted a persistent structural challenge: Africa accounts for less than one percent of global data centre capacity, and frontier AI models are predominantly trained on non-African datasets, even as the continent’s AI market is projected to reach US$16.5 billion by 2030 from US$4.5 billion today.

“Africa is at a strategic crossroads: it can either remain a dependent consumer of foreign AI or emerge as a sovereign architect of its own digital future,” said Dr. Shikoh Gitau, Founder and CEO of Qhala. She called for urgent investment in compute infrastructure, localised data systems, and energy-efficient data centres, arguing that without deliberate action, Africa risks structural dependency on external digital ecosystems.

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Redington, the US$11.8 billion technology distribution group, said its East Africa business is moving beyond hardware resale. “Real value creation is coming from advisory, integration, cybersecurity, and managed services,” said Serkan Çelik, the company’s CEO for Turkey, Africa, Egypt, and the CIS region.

The event also served as a launchpad for consumer tech, with London-founded smartphone and audio brand Nothing announcing its full product range entry into the Kenyan market through a distribution partnership with Mitsumi. Nothing, which bills itself as the only new smartphone brand to emerge globally in the last decade, said Kenya would be the springboard for a broader East African rollout covering Uganda, Rwanda, and West Africa.

The event concludes on Thursday with the Venture Scaling Forum and the Supernova Challenge, the region’s largest startup pitch competition.

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By Nixon Kanali

Tech journalist based in Nairobi. I track and report on tech and African startups. Founder and Editor of TechTrends Media. Nixon is also the East African tech editor for Africa Business Communities. Send tips to kanali@techtrendsmedia.co.ke.
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