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Kenya Convenes Cloud And Data Centre Leaders To Accelerate Digital Hub Ambitions
Kenya has taken a decisive step toward cementing its position as Africa’s foremost digital hub, convening a high-level strategic consultative forum that brought together the State Department for ICT and the Digital Economy alongside data centre operators and cloud services providers.
The forum, anchored by a keynote from ICT Principal Secretary John Tanui, drew participation from some of the continent’s most consequential digital infrastructure players — including iXAfrica Data Centres, iColo (a Digital Realty Company), Liquid Intelligent Technologies, Oracle, Safaricom, Airtel, and EverseTech — whose combined infrastructure investments are actively translating national digital policy into physical and commercial reality.
Policy as the Anchor
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Central to the government’s pitch to industry was the promise of a clear, predictable, and progressive regulatory environment. PS Tanui outlined a policy stack designed to give investors the certainty they need to commit long-term capital: the National Cloud Services Policy, which sets standards for cloud-first governance and data classification across public and private sectors; a Data Governance Policy currently in development; an AI and Emerging Technologies Policy also in progress; and the Government Interoperability Framework.
“By coupling deliberate cloud policy certainty with state-of-the-art data centre expansion, we are positioning Kenya as the undeniable powerhouse for global hyperscalers, cloud providers, and technology capital,” Tanui said.
Infrastructure as Economic Strategy
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The forum framed data centres and cloud services not merely as technical utilities but as strategic economic assets — the compute backbone underpinning public service delivery, national data security, and the heavy workloads required to scale artificial intelligence at the national level.
Key strategic imperatives highlighted included cloud-first governance to streamline government operations and reduce infrastructure costs; localised data centre expansion as a magnet for foreign direct investment; data sovereignty frameworks that balance national interests with global compliance standards; and youth employment, with an explicit goal of anchoring high-value cloud operations locally to generate sustainable technical jobs.
Private Sector as Primary Engine
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A notable theme of the forum was the government’s candid acknowledgement that digital transformation cannot be state-led alone. Tanui was explicit: the capital, technical expertise, and innovation capacity of the private sector are indispensable. The consultative format — rather than a conventional policy announcement — reflected a deliberate effort to deepen ecosystem alignment between government, local operators, and global cloud giants.
The Bigger Picture
Kenya’s play is not simply to be a consumer of global technology infrastructure but to host, build, and scale it for the continent. With Nairobi already home to some of the region’s most significant data centre capacity and fibre connectivity, the policy and investment signals coming out of this forum reinforce a long-standing national ambition: to make Kenya the default digital gateway for Sub-Saharan Africa.
For CIOs and technology leaders across the region, the message is clear — Kenya is not waiting for the future of African cloud infrastructure to arrive. It is building it.