Africa stakes its claim in global AI governance - African Business

Africa stakes its claim in global AI governance

As artificial intelligence reshapes the global economy, African policymakers and institutions are moving decisively to define their own frameworks, priorities and standards, signalling a shift from passive adoption to active leadership.

From Nairobi to Lagos, from Kigali to Tunis, a quiet revolution is underway. African policymakers, technologists and civil society leaders are no longer willing to accept global AI standards handed down from Washington, Brussels or Beijing. Instead, they are building their own frameworks, and the Africa AI Governance Forum (AAGF) has emerged as one of the most visible expressions of this ambition.

The Forum, which has been gathering momentum across the continent, brings together governments, private sector actors, civil society and academia to promote ethical, inclusive and sovereign AI development in Africa. Its emergence is timely. The African Union adopted its Continental AI Strategy in 2024, and in April 2025 a landmark Global AI Summit on Africa in Kigali secured endorsements from 49 countries, culminating in the Africa Declaration on Artificial Intelligence and the launch of a $60bn Africa AI Fund.

A continent with everything to play for

The stakes could hardly be higher. AI is projected to add between $2.9tn and $4.8tn to Africa’s economy by 2030. Sectors ranging from agriculture and healthcare to education and financial services are set to be transformed. By 2035, more young Africans will enter the workforce each year than in the rest of the world combined. This demographic dividend, if effectively harnessed through AI, could drive a new era of prosperity.

Yet the gap between potential and reality remains stark. Africa currently accounts for just 1% of global AI compute capacity. Without deliberate governance and investment strategies, the continent risks becoming primarily a consumer of systems designed elsewhere, calibrated to different contexts and potentially ill-suited to African societies.

This is precisely why the AAGF matters. By promoting an African AI Ethics Charter grounded in human rights, fairness, transparency, cultural sensitivity and inclusivity, the Forum is helping to define what responsible AI looks like from an African perspective. Its AI Governance Framework for African Nations offers a practical roadmap, covering national strategy development, regulatory design, capacity building, infrastructure investment and cross-border cooperation.

From soft law to hard commitments

Africa’s AI governance landscape is evolving rapidly. Research by the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace indicates that fifteen national and two continental AI strategies or policies have already been published. Countries are moving at different speeds, with some advancing ambitious frameworks while others are still defining their approach. Nevertheless, the overall direction is clear. African governments are taking AI governance seriously.

The Africa Declaration on Artificial Intelligence, endorsed at the Kigali summit, commits to seven priority pillars: talent, data, infrastructure, markets, investment, governance and institutional cooperation. The newly established Africa AI Council is expected to play a central role in implementation. At the same time, African participation in global standard-setting is increasing, with a quarter of ISO member countries engaged in AI standards work now coming from the continent. This signals a shift from reacting to global norms to actively shaping them.

What the AAGF brings to the table

Forums such as the AAGF perform a vital function. They create space for open dialogue between stakeholders with competing priorities, including innovation, regulation and ethics. They connect governments that might otherwise operate in isolation, ensure civil society has a voice and help businesses, particularly start-ups and SMEs, to navigate responsible AI adoption within diverse African contexts.

For investors and businesses observing Africa’s digital economy, the Forum’s work also sends a clear signal. Countries that establish transparent, ethical and predictable governance frameworks are more likely to attract AI-related investment. Effective governance does not hinder innovation; it underpins it.

The road ahead

Momentum is building, but challenges remain significant. Infrastructure deficits, limited compute capacity and fragmented regulatory environments across 54 countries complicate efforts to develop coherent, pan-African approaches. Data sovereignty remains a pressing issue, particularly in ensuring that Africa’s rich and linguistically diverse datasets are used in ways that serve local interests. There is also a risk that AI-driven automation, without complementary labour market policies, could deepen inequality.

Encouragingly, African institutions are confronting these challenges directly and forming coalitions to address them. The Africa AI Governance Forum, alongside organisations such as the African Union Commission and the Smart Africa Alliance, is part of a growing ecosystem committed to ensuring that AI serves Africa’s development goals.

In a global AI race often dominated by a small number of powerful nations and corporations, Africa’s push for sovereign, ethical and inclusive governance is both a strategic necessity and a powerful statement of intent. The continent has the talent, the data and an increasingly strong institutional foundation. What it now requires is sustained investment and greater global attention.