MTN’s Bold AI Data Center Expansion: African Telecom Giant Seeks US and European Partners
African telecom powerhouse MTN is shaking up the tech landscape—forging strategic alliances with US and European partners to build next-generation AI data centers.
Why this matters: Africa's digital infrastructure just got a major upgrade. MTN's push into AI infrastructure signals a continent-wide transformation—bridging technological gaps while creating new opportunities for global collaboration.
The partnership play: By tapping Western expertise, MTN accelerates its AI capabilities without reinventing the wheel. Smart move—unless you're one of those traditional finance guys still betting on physical gold.
Bottom line: This isn't just about data centers—it's about positioning Africa at the forefront of the AI revolution. Watch this space—the next big tech disruption might just come from unexpected corners.
Nigeria has taken the lead in the MTN initiative
The group’s chief executive, Ralph Mupita, said that MTN will directly commit capital towards data centre construction, but pointed out the need for global partners to help fund and scale what could become a continent-wide network.
“We are now in the commercial negotiation phase and shortlisting partners who can help us scale,” Mupita told Bloomberg, adding that the company aims to conclude these partnerships within the year.
Nigeria is the first port of call, where MTN plans to invest around $240 million to construct its first AI-focused data centre, with the facility tipped to supply computing power to governments and businesses. According to MTN, excess capacity will be rented out to other organisations in need, and the group has even hinted at its own hardware fittings, although negotiations are still ongoing.
While Mupita declined to give names or financial details of the discussions, potential partners include co-investors, companies specialising in AI infrastructure, and hyperscalers, large-scale computing providers such as Microsoft, according to the report.
Africa is home to the world’s youngest and fastest-growing population, yet the continent possesses less than 1% of global AI data centre capacity. Most of what little exists is concentrated in South Africa, where Microsoft, Amazon, and Alibaba already offer cloud services.
This infrastructure gap could leave African firms and governments reliant on external markets for AI needs as a result. At the same time, it also presents an investment opportunity that some African nations are beginning to explore. In Kenya, Microsoft and Abu Dhabi’s G42 are building a geothermal-powered facility, while Sunil Mittal’s Airtel Africa is working with Nxtra to expand Nigeria’s capacity.
“The opportunity is clear, Africa cannot afford to be left behind in the AI revolution,” said one regional telecoms consultant. “Whoever establishes the backbone infrastructure now will dominate the digital economy in the years ahead.”
MTN will establish a new business unit to spearhead infrastructure monetization
The telecoms company is not alone in trying to lure heavy data users, as other companies from Asia and Europe are also investing heavily in the data centre infrastructure. The hope is to secure deals with the hyperscalers while also meeting mounting demand from local consumers and businesses.
For this project, MTN will set up a new business unit called Genova, which will spearhead infrastructure monetisation. “With Genova, we are looking not only at monetising what we have but also at building for the future,” explained Mupita.
“This is about creating an ecosystem in which African businesses can thrive in the age of AI.”
Mupita.
The project will not be immune to challenges, for instance, access to dependable electricity for such energy-intensive facilities. “We are exploring every option to ensure our data centres have sustainable, efficient power,” he said, adding that renewable energy is one of the solutions to guarantee an uninterrupted energy supply.
“AI compute is not just about flashy apps or robots,” said one Nairobi-based technology strategist. “It’s about crunching agricultural data, improving disease modelling, or making financial inclusion scalable. Local capacity matters.”
The chief executive feels the logic is straightforward and Africa can either build its own digital backbone now or remain perpetually dependent on centres overseas.
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