Google, the technology global giant, used its first-ever Cloud Summit on African soil to signal that South Africa is becoming the company’s launchpad for building the continent’s artificial intelligence (AI) economy.
Held in Johannesburg on Wednesday, the summit brought together President Cyril Ramaphosa, Google executives, business leaders including Econet founder Strive Masiyiwa, policymakers, startups and investors to showcase how AI, cloud infrastructure and digital public infrastructure are reshaping Africa’s technology landscape.
The announcements marked a notable shift in Google’s Africa strategy. Rather than focusing primarily on expanding internet access, a priority that defined much of the past two decades, the company is now investing across the AI value chain, from cloud infrastructure and computing capacity to startup funding, university research, creator tools and workforce development.
The strategy reflects a broader change in how global technology companies view the continent. Africa is becoming a market where AI infrastructure, computing power, local talent, and homegrown companies will determine future competitiveness. For Google, South Africa has emerged as the natural base from which that ecosystem can scale across the continent.











