Nine months after African leaders pledged to mobilize $60 billion for artificial intelligence development, the ambitious fund remains largely on paper as governance concerns and funding uncertainties test the continent’s technological aspirations.
Announced to great fanfare at the Global AI Summit in Kigali last April, the Africa AI Fund aimed to position the continent as a serious player in the global AI race. Fifty-two countries have signed the African Declaration on Artificial Intelligence (AI), pledging to build a sovereign AI infrastructure, scale African startups, and develop local research capacity.
But by January 2026, key questions remain unanswered: how the fund will be run, who will contribute, and how it will avoid the corruption that has plagued the continent’s efforts to date.
Senegalese officials at the Digital Ministry told reporters in May that nothing would be concrete before the next African Union summit, citing a lack of transparency regarding governance structures. Although the summit has ended, the Fund’s operating framework still lacks clarity.
The Fund faces immediate credibility issues rooted in Africa’s fiscal realities. Public debt across the continent will reach 66% of average gross domestic product (GDP) in 2024, with more than 20 countries in debt crisis or at high risk of debt crisis, according to the African Development Bank (AfDB). Several governments that have pledged billions of dollars to invest in AI are simultaneously cutting health and education budgets under pressure from international financial institutions.
In December, AfDB released a report establishing a strategic roadmap to unlock the economic potential of AI across Africa, predicting that comprehensive AI adoption could generate up to $1 trillion in additional GDP by 2035. But those gains depend on sustained investment in fundamentals such as power infrastructure, data centers and skills development.
Although Africa accounts for less than 1% of the world’s data center capacity, approximately 600 million Africans still lack reliable electricity. The continent needs $130 billion to $170 billion a year for infrastructure, but faces a funding gap of $68 billion to $100 billion.
The proposed African AI Council is intended to oversee the fund under the leadership of the Smart Africa Steering Committee, and its composition was originally scheduled to be unveiled before last year’s Global AI Summit. That deadline has passed, and officials said a final decision would be made in July. As of mid-January 2026, the exact structure and powers of the Council remain unclear.
More than 90 percent of sub-Saharan African countries score below the global average, according to Transparency International’s 2024 Corruption Perceptions Index. Some signatories to the declaration, such as South Sudan, Equatorial Guinea and the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC), consistently rank among the most corrupt countries in the world.
The former Continental Technology Fund offers a cautionary lesson. Over the past decade, billions of dollars earmarked for digital identity systems, communications infrastructure, and e-government platforms across Africa have been lost to opaque contracts and stalled projects. The African Union’s own Africa Infrastructure Development Program has faced repeated delays and funding shortfalls since its launch in 2012.
Moroccan government representatives struck a more hopeful tone in May, saying the fund had at least cost money, suggesting serious intentions. Philanthropic support could begin with the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, whose founder attended April’s summit as a patron.
The declaration itself sets out broad goals, including aligning national AI strategies with continental priorities, protecting data sovereignty, building digital infrastructure, and fostering what it calls a sustainable AI innovation ecosystem. However, there is no binding funding formula or public timeline for capital mobilization, nor is it clear how contributions will be divided between the government, development banks and private investors.
During a high-level policy dialogue in Addis Ababa in December, AU Secretary-General Lerato Mataboghe identified critical challenges, including gaps in digital infrastructure, lack of AI skills, lack of high-quality datasets, and lack of funding. She pointed out that over 83% of AI startup funding in the first quarter of 2025 went to just four countries: Kenya, Nigeria, South Africa, and Egypt.
The economic case for AI investment remains compelling. African startups have raised more than $200 million in AI-related funding in the past two years, demonstrating growing investor interest. In the Middle East and North Africa (MENA) region, funding for AI companies will triple to $817 million in 2025, proving that capital exists for trusted AI efforts.
Some African countries are making progress on their own. Egypt announced its second national AI strategy in January 2025, aiming to generate $42.7 billion annually from 2025 to 2030 while expanding its AI talent pool to 30,000 professionals. South Africa topped the continent in the 2024 Global Index on Responsible AI, but with a modest score of 27.61 out of 100.
Kenya has approved a national AI strategy focused on alignment with data sovereignty and a bottom-up economic transformation agenda. Ghana has adopted a National AI Strategy for 2023-2033 and proposed the creation of a responsible AI Directorate to oversee its implementation.
But coordinating AI policy across 54 countries, each with their own legal systems and political motivations, will test the credibility of the proposed African AI Council from day one. By 2025, fewer than 12 African countries have developed comprehensive national AI strategies, and regulatory institutions remain weak.
For the fund to succeed, African leaders will need to directly confront the risks of corruption and implement strict governance rules, investment disclosure, and third-party audits that are insulated from domestic politics. Regional computing infrastructure, transparent research funding, independent universities, and open innovation programs for startups will have more long-term benefits than prestige projects or politically branded AI hubs.
The African Union’s Continental AI Strategy, adopted in July 2024, focuses on maximizing the benefits of AI, strengthening capacity, mitigating risks, fostering investment, and fostering regional and global cooperation. It targets critical sectors such as agriculture, healthcare, education and climate change adaptation.
In 2026, the African AI Fund will be judged less by the scale of its initial announcement and more by the discipline of its execution. If African leaders treat the fund as another headline-driven pledge without confronting governance challenges, the $60 billion pledge will deepen their cynicism rather than capacity.
The question is no longer whether Africa should invest in AI. The question is whether we can manage that investment transparently and effectively enough to translate that ambition into infrastructure, research and true technological sovereignty.


