Google Cloud outlines Africa infrastructure and AI initiatives at Johannesburg summit

Google Cloud has announced new infrastructure, AI research and skills initiatives for Africa at its inaugural Cloud Summit in Africa held in Johannesburg on July 1, 2026. The company said the moves include a new connectivity hub in South Africa’s Eastern Cape, an applied AI lab in Ghana, and funding-backed skills programmes, as it expands its cloud and AI footprint on the continent.

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Google Cloud on July 1, 2026 hosted its inaugural Cloud Summit in Africa in Johannesburg, announcing a package of infrastructure, AI research and digital skilling initiatives that it said are aimed at strengthening the continent’s readiness for wider AI adoption.

The event, held at the Sandton Convention Centre in South Africa, drew about 3,000 business leaders, developers, public sector leaders and partners, according to the company. Google Cloud positioned the announcements as part of its “Building for Africa” mission and said the initiatives build on the 2025 launch of its Johannesburg Cloud Region.

Among the announcements was a new “Digital Exchange Port” connectivity hub to be built in South Africa’s Eastern Cape. Google said the facility will serve as an international switching point intended to improve African internet connectivity by linking the continent to Australia via the Umoja subsea cable and through a new subsea route to India. The company said it is the first of four connectivity hubs it has committed to deliver on the continent.

Google also said it will launch an applied AI lab in Ghana under the Google AI Futures Fund, working with Google Research and venture capital partners. The “Google Africa Applied AI Lab” will be based at the Accra AI Community Centre and will pair African founders with Google researchers, including access to AI models, to work on “real-world, uniquely African challenges,” the company said. Applications are open and will close on August 31, 2026, according to the statement.

In addition, Google said it has partnered with The Akuna Group on a creative AI education programme backed by more than $1 million (about KES 129 million) in Google.org funding, aimed at delivering AI creative education and digital tools for creators. In South Africa, Google’s Economic and Community Development programme and WeThinkCode said they will build a R3 million digital innovation centre at the George Tabor Campus of South West Gauteng TVET College in Soweto (about KES 21 million), intended to provide skills training at scale.

Google said it will also open applications on July 21, 2026 for the 2026 South African cohort of its Google for Startups Accelerator, selecting 15 local startups for an AI-focused curriculum, mentorship and non-dilutive funding. The company said this forms part of its pledge to back 50 African ventures between 2024 and 2028.

South African President Cyril Ramaphosa opened the summit, saying the event underscored Africa’s place in the global cloud industry. “Today’s Google Cloud Summit affirms Africa’s position as a core growth region for the global cloud ecosystem,” Ramaphosa said in remarks included in the release.

James Manyika, Google’s Senior Vice President for Research, Labs, Technology & Society, said the company is focusing its new investments on infrastructure, innovation and skills. “Building on our past commitments, we’re making new investments in critical areas: infrastructure, African-led innovation, and education and skill building,” Manyika said.

Maureen Costello, Vice President for UK, Ireland, and Sub Saharan Africa at Google Cloud, linked the company’s push to the Johannesburg Cloud Region’s projected economic impact. Costello said the region is estimated to contribute $90.6 billion (ZAR 1.7 trillion) in additional gross economic output and support 314,900 jobs by 2030—figures Google attributed to its own estimates. The $90.6 billion projection is equivalent to about KES 11.7 trillion.

For Kenya and the wider East African market, the announcements are likely to be closely watched by enterprises and startups seeking lower-latency cloud services, stronger international connectivity, and structured support to develop AI products. While the connectivity hub and innovation centre are located in South Africa and the applied AI lab is based in Ghana, Google said the lab will support founders from across the continent, which could provide a pathway for Kenyan startups to access research collaboration and tooling.

Next milestones flagged by Google include the July 21 opening of applications for the South Africa startup accelerator cohort and the August 31 deadline for applications to the applied AI lab in Ghana. The company did not disclose timelines for completion of the Eastern Cape connectivity hub or the Soweto digital innovation centre.