Home General News Google boosts Africa’s connectivity with new subsea cable hub, invests $9m

Google boosts Africa’s connectivity with new subsea cable hub, invests $9m

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SEARCH giant, Google, has announced a new set of investments in Africa, reaffirming its nearly two-decade commitment to the continent’s digital transformation.

The latest commitments focus on empowering Africa’s next generation through AI, unlocking opportunities, and expanding the innovation capacity of young Africans.

Google, on Thursday, said these new commitments cover Internet connectivity, youth-led learning and innovation, and skills training.
Further, the American firm disclosed four strategic subsea cable connectivity hubs in the north, south, east, and west regions of Africa. This investment creates new digital corridors within Africa and between Africa and the rest of the world – ultimately deepening international connectivity and resilience, as well as spurring economic growth and opportunity.

This is the latest addition to Google’s Africa Connect infrastructure programme, which sees the company build vital connectivity across the continent, including the Google Cloud region in Johannesburg serving users across the continent, the Equiano cable running along the entire western seaboard of the continent, and Umoja, the first fiber optic route to directly connect Africa with Australia (running through Kenya, Uganda, Rwanda, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Zambia, Zimbabwe, and South Africa).

Google claimed that its investments to date have enabled 100 million Africans to access the Internet for the first time, and the Equiano cable alone is expected to increase real GDP this year in Nigeria, South Africa, and Namibia by an estimated $11.1 billion, $5.8 billion, and $290 million, respectively.

Google is also looking at enabling Africa’s young people to learn, innovate, and lead, stressing that this is critical to Africa’s development and economic growth.

“That’s why Google is today also announcing free one-year subscriptions to Google AI Pro plan for college students (18 or older) across the continent – starting with Egypt, Ghana, Kenya, Morocco, Nigeria, South Africa, Rwanda, and Zimbabwe. The subscription provides advanced AI to students – from Deep Research, which helps save time with custom research reports and in-depth information from hundreds of sources across the web, to Gemini 2.5 Pro, which provides help with assignments or writing,” he stated.

In terms of equipping people with AI skills, which has become more critical, to date, Google has trained seven million Africans and plans to train an additional three million students, young people, and teachers by 2030.
Google is also bolstering local capacity by providing African universities and research institutions with over $17 million in funding, curriculum, training, and compute, and access to advanced AI models over the past four years – with an additional $9 million planned for the coming year.

Further, Managing Director for Google in Africa, Alex Okosi, said: “Africa’s digital economy holds immense potential, and it will be driven by the talent and ingenuity of its next generation. Today’s announcements, spanning AI education, advanced tools for students, and expanded connectivity, are a unified investment into the upward trajectory of the continent. We are committed to providing the foundational infrastructure, the cutting-edge tools, and the financial support necessary for Africa’s youth to innovate, lead, and build a thriving digital world.”
Google said these announcements are the latest chapter in its long-term investment in the continent, which has delivered on $1 billion of investment.

Google claimed that its sustained commitment to Africa has included driving connectivity, training more than seven million people across the continent in digital skills to support the future workforce, and supporting 153 startups from 17 African nations through the Google for Startups Accelerator Africa, helping them raise $300 million and create 3,500 jobs.
According to the firm, AI created an unprecedented opportunity to benefit everyone, and Google is committed to making that a reality for people, businesses, and communities across Africa.

“Today’s announcements are another example of how Google is continuing to expand connectivity, increase product access and skills across the continent, and enable African-led innovation – with more to come,” it stated.

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