The move builds on Microsoft’s earlier $1.2 billion commitment to South Africa and underscores the country’s growing importance as a regional digital hub.
With relatively advanced infrastructure, a large enterprise market, and policy efforts aimed at digital transformation, South Africa continues to stand out as a preferred destination for hyperscale cloud investments across the continent.
Speaking during a presentation, Microsoft President Brad Smith said the funding will go beyond capacity upgrades to address long-term operational needs.
“This investment will cover securing land for future data centre growth, improving power and water readiness, and increasing capacity in our existing data centre regions,” he stated.
Smith emphasised that infrastructure remains the foundation of any meaningful AI ecosystem. “You can’t have AI without data centres,” he reiterated, explaining that AI development depends on a layered system of infrastructure, models, and applications.
Data centres, he noted, provide the computing power and data backbone needed to train and deploy AI solutions at scale.
Microsoft is already leveraging this ecosystem through partnerships with local firms such as Lelapa AI, which is working on multilingual large language models tailored to African languages—an area seen as critical for inclusive AI adoption.
Beyond infrastructure, Microsoft is also betting heavily on skills. Its AI Skills initiative, launched in South Africa in 2025, has reached millions globally.
In January 2026, the company partnered with the South African Broadcasting Corporation (SABC) to expand access to digital education via the SABC+ platform.
Tiara Pathon, director of Microsoft Elevate AI skills in South Africa, said the goal is broad-based inclusion.
Source: Africabusinessinsider
