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UAE Pours Billions Into African Technology: A New Era of Digital Partnership

by Faith Amonimo
June 6, 2025
in Investor Hotspots, Middle East Innovation Frontier, Middle Eastern Startup Ecosystem
Reading Time: 7 mins read

The United Arab Emirates has become Africa’s biggest technology investor. This is changing how African countries build their digital future. UAE money is flowing into African tech like never before.

The Numbers Tell the Story

Between 2019 and 2023, UAE companies announced $110 billion worth of projects across Africa. That’s more than double what companies from the UK, France, or China promised during the same time.

Most of this money, about $72 billion, went into renewable energy projects. But technology investments are growing fast too.

In 2022 and 2023 alone, the UAE announced $97 billion in African investments. That’s three times more than China’s total for the same period.

Ghana Gets Africa’s Biggest Tech Hub

Ghana just signed the biggest deal yet. The country will get a $1 billion innovation hub, paid for entirely by UAE’s Ports, Customs and Free Zone Corp (PCFC).

The project will cover 9.7 square miles in Ningo Prampram, near Ghana’s capital. Construction starts next year and should finish by 2027.

PCFC runs more than 11 innovation hubs around the world. They work with big names like Microsoft, Oracle, and IBM. This is their first major project in Africa.

The hub will focus on artificial intelligence and create thousands of jobs. It fits with Ghana’s plan to train one million coders and become Africa’s AI leader.

UAE Funds Flow to African Startups

UAE money isn’t just going to big infrastructure. Venture capital funds backed by UAE investors are putting money into African startups too.

Abu Dhabi’s Mubadala Investment Company and France’s Bpifrance invested in Partech Africa II. This fund has $305 million to spend on African tech companies. It’s the biggest venture capital fund for African startups.

The fund gives between $1 million and $15 million to startups from their early days through growth stages.

Dubai Future District Fund also put money into this fund. These investments show UAE’s serious interest in African tech businesses.

Nigeria Partnership Gains Steam

Nigeria has Africa’s biggest tech startup scene. Nigerian startups got 35% of all African tech funding in early 2024, about $163 million out of $466 million total.

The UAE wants to partner with Nigeria to help these startups grow bigger. UAE officials say they can offer expertise and funding to Nigerian tech companies.

At the GITEX Global tech conference in Dubai, Lagos State Government aimed to help Nigerian startups get $2-3 million in new investments.

Kenya Gets Billion-Dollar Digital Boost

UAE’s G42 and Microsoft are putting $1 billion into Kenya’s digital infrastructure. This is the biggest tech investment in East African history.

The money will build a data center that runs Microsoft’s Azure cloud service. It will serve all of East Africa.

The project promises to give internet access to 20 million people in Kenya and 50 million across East Africa by 2025.

G42 and Microsoft will also work on AI models that understand local African languages. They’ll create an innovation hub and improve cybersecurity across the region.

Why UAE Is Investing Now

The UAE wants to change its economy. Right now, it depends too much on oil and gas sales. Technology investments help create new sources of income.

UAE officials also see big opportunities in Africa. The continent has young populations that are eager to use technology. Many African countries need better internet and digital services.

At the same time, Western countries have pulled back from big infrastructure projects in Africa. Many of these projects didn’t make the money investors expected.

African leaders also felt disappointed by climate finance promises from Western governments. At the recent COP29 climate conference, wealthy countries promised $300 billion per year. But African countries wanted $1.3 trillion.

African Tech Funding Falls, UAE Steps In

African tech startups had a tough year in 2024. Total funding fell to $2.2 billion, down from $2.9 billion in 2023. Some reports show the drop was even bigger – from $2.4 billion to $1.1 billion.

This funding drop came from global economic problems. Rising interest rates and inflation made investors more careful with their money.

But UAE investments are helping fill the gap. While other investors pull back, UAE companies are putting more money into African tech.

Beyond Technology: Mining and Energy

UAE investments go beyond just technology. International Resource Holdings, controlled by Abu Dhabi’s national security adviser, bought a 51% stake in Zambia’s Mopani Copper Mines for $1.1 billion.

This surprised many people. Chinese and South African companies were expected to win the deal. But UAE’s offer to invest in the mine while keeping jobs made it the best choice.

UAE company Masdar also announced $2 billion for solar power projects in Zambia. However, financial problems at Zambia’s state energy company have slowed these investments.

Concerns About UAE Investments

Not everyone is happy about UAE’s growing role in Africa. Some people worry about worker rights and environmental protection.

UAE has faced criticism for how it treats migrant workers. The country also continues to support oil and gas projects while investing in renewable energy.

Activists worry that UAE’s poor record on these issues might affect its African investments.

There are also concerns about illegal gold trade. Researchers found that 2,569 tonnes of gold moved from Africa to Dubai between 2012 and 2022 without proper documentation. This gold was worth $115.3 billion.

What This Means for Africa

UAE investments bring both opportunities and challenges for African countries.

The money helps fill huge gaps in technology infrastructure. African countries need better internet, data centers, and digital services. UAE companies can provide these faster than many other investors.

The investments also create jobs. Ghana’s innovation hub will employ thousands of people. Kenya’s data center will need local workers to build and run it.

UAE partnerships give African countries access to global technology networks. Companies like Microsoft and IBM work with UAE investors. This brings world-class technology to African markets.

But African governments need to be careful. They should make sure UAE investments follow good labor and environmental standards.

Looking Ahead

UAE’s technology investments in Africa are just getting started. More projects are in the pipeline across different countries.

The success of early projects like Ghana’s innovation hub and Kenya’s data center will influence future investments. If these work well, more UAE money will likely flow to African tech.

For African countries, UAE investments offer a new path to digital development. They don’t have to wait for Western donors or Chinese loans. UAE companies are ready to invest now.

But success will depend on careful planning. African governments must ensure these investments truly benefit their people and economies.

The partnership between UAE and Africa represents a new model for South-South cooperation. It shows how Middle Eastern countries can help African nations build their digital futures.

As global technology shifts, this partnership could reshape both regions. UAE gets new markets and resources. Africa gets the investment and expertise it needs to join the digital economy.

The next few years will show whether this new partnership delivers on its promises.

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