The closing day of the 28th annual
Africa Tech Festival 2025 delivered a clear message: Africa is on a
technology trajectory unlike anything seen before, and its potential is
limitless. With the world’s youngest population and a rapidly expanding
digital economy, the continent is charting its course toward digital
sovereignty. This message was reiterated in the headline keynote, Closing the
Talent Gap to Power Africa’s AI Economy, which emphasised that Africa’s
digital transformation depends on embedding foundational digital literacy and
AI skills across education systems. Along with moderator Dr. Miriam Altman,
panellists Mary Mahuma (Philip Morris SA), Sipho Mtombeni (Google), and
Shamiela Letsoalo (Naspers/Ecommerce Forum SA) highlighted the need for
critical thinking, problem-solving, and adaptable “AI-enabled” workers across
all sectors. They pointed to scalable talent models and partnerships as
catalysts for preparing Africa’s youth for emerging digital careers. Data excellence was in the spotlight at the AI Summit, with Building
Africa’s Data Backbone – Governance, Infrastructure and Interoperability, focusing
on the foundations required for continental-scale digital growth.
SenthilKumar Velayutham (African Development Bank), Matis Pellerin (Oracle),
Caitlin Tallack (The AI Collective), James Turuthi (TESPOK), and Matthias
Reusing (Delegation of the EU to the African Union) emphasised that
harmonised data regulation, interoperable systems, and aligned regional
standards are crucial for unlocking innovation, supporting AI development,
and enhancing Africa’s digital resilience. Policy as a catalyst for African startups took centre stage at AfricaIgnite,
where Kunbi Tinuoye (UrbanGeekz), Nikita Thakrar (Included VC), and Natalie
Miller (XRGlobal) called for gender-equitable investment environments and
coordinated cross-border regulation to expand capital access beyond the
continent’s major hubs. Speakers noted that Africa’s next wave of high-growth
ventures will depend on investor diversity, streamlined regulation, and
policies that reflect the realities entrepreneurs face across 54 markets. The AfricaCom panel Collaboration in Action – Fostering Telco
Partnerships to Drive Digital Inclusion brought together leaders
from MTN, Standard Bank, RMB, and the Mobile Ecosystem Forum to explore how
cross-industry alliances are extending connectivity, enabling digital
commerce, and supporting the continent’s broader inclusion agenda. In addition to the sessions taking place at the main venue, the Next Gen
Talent Summit at UVU Africa celebrated Africa’s emerging innovators,
showcasing the young entrepreneurs and digital talent shaping the continent’s
future technological progress. Reflecting on the successful conclusion of the event, Kadi Diallo, Portfolio
Manager for Africa Tech Festival, noted, “Africa Tech Festival 2025 has
proven that when innovation, investment, and policy align, transformation
follows. Over three impactful days, Africa Tech Festival 2025 reaffirmed
Africa’s position not only as a participant in the global technology
landscape but as a continent shaping how innovation can be inclusive,
responsible, and transformative.” Across all four programmes - AfricaCom, AfricaTech, The AI Summit Cape Town,
and AfricaIgnite - this year’s festival brought together technology leaders,
policymakers, global innovators, founders, investors, and future talent for
three days of critical dialogue, collaboration, and knowledge-sharing. Framed
by the central themes of responsible innovation, inclusive investment,
connectivity for development, and policy harmonisation, Africa Tech Festival
2025 featured high-level keynotes, policy-shaping panels, fireside chats, start-up
pitches, and cross-industry networking designed to accelerate Africa’s
digital progress. Africa Tech Festival has once again reaffirmed its role as the premier
platform where Africa’s technology ecosystem comes together to collaborate,
co-create, and shape the continent’s digital future. |
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