Expanding cloud infrastructure could lower the cost of accessing enterprise-grade technologies that were previously available mainly to large corporations.
Cloud platforms increasingly allow businesses to manage accounting, payroll, inventory, cybersecurity, customer relationships and AI-powered business processes without investing heavily in on-site IT infrastructure.
Google has exceeded its five-year US$1 billion investment commitment in Africa, reinforcing South Africa’s ambition to become the continent’s leading hub for cloud computing and artificial intelligence.
The announcement, made at the inaugural Google Cloud Summit in Johannesburg, comes as government intensifies efforts to build digital infrastructure capable of driving economic growth, supporting small and medium enterprises and strengthening the country’s global competitiveness.
Opening the summit, President Cyril Ramaphosa described cloud computing and AI as the defining infrastructure of the 21st century, comparable to the role electricity and the internet played in previous industrial revolutions. He said the investments announced at the summit represented a vote of confidence in South Africa’s economy and would help accelerate job creation, innovation and the growth of SMEs.
The summit, the first of its kind to be hosted on the African continent, brought together around 3,000 business leaders, developers, policymakers and technology partners under the theme, Building for Africa with Google Cloud.
It also reinforced South Africa’s position as Africa’s largest cloud market, with the country already hosting approximately 70% of the continent’s hyperscale data centre capacity.
Investment targets infrastructure, innovation and skills
Google unveiled several initiatives aimed at expanding Africa’s digital ecosystem, including a Digital Exchange Port in the Eastern Cape to improve international internet connectivity, Africa’s first Applied AI Lab in Ghana, more than US$1 million (about R17 million) in Google funding for AI creative education, and a R3 million Digital Innovation Centre at the South West Gauteng TVET College in Soweto developed with WeThinkCode.
The company will also open applications this month for a new Google for Startups Accelerator cohort focused on South African AI startups.
https://cloud.google.com/solutions/smb
According to Google Cloud, its Johannesburg Cloud Region, launched in 2025, is projected to contribute US$90.6 billion (approximately R1.7 trillion) in additional gross economic output and support nearly 314,900 jobs in South Africa by 2030.
Maureen Costello, Vice President for UK, Ireland and Sub-Saharan Africa at Google Cloud, said African businesses had moved beyond experimenting with AI and were increasingly deploying the technology to solve real-world challenges.
Alongside Google’s investment, Ramaphosa highlighted the government’s own Sebowa Cloud platform, operated through the Council for Scientific and Industrial Research and the National Integrated Cyberinfrastructure System, as part of efforts to strengthen South Africa’s digital sovereignty.
He said the government wants to build local digital capabilities that would allow the country to secure its data, commercialise African innovations and reduce dependence on foreign-owned technology infrastructure.
Ramaphosa said South Africa’s ambition extends beyond hosting data centres.
“Our ambition is to build companies, produce researchers, commercialise African ideas and create intellectual property that competes globally,” he said. As investment in cloud infrastructure accelerates, the challenge will be ensuring SMEs have the digital skills, affordable connectivity and access to finance needed to participate fully in South Africa’s emerging AI-driven economy.





























































