Business Weekly (Zimbabwe)

Masiyiwa aims to put Africa’s digital economy in the fast lane

- Gugu Lourie Read full story on www.businesswe­ekly.co.zw

LIKE many people affected by Eskom’s load shedding, I found myself thinking about technology and how authentic leadership can accelerate developmen­t and fight poverty in Africa and the rest of the world.

I pondered about how authentic leadership could keep the lights on and what it could do for the advancemen­t of poor communitie­s — not only my poverty-stricken hometown of Bethal, Mpumalanga. However, my hometown needs more than lights — it needs serious developmen­t interventi­on. It is a shame that developmen­t has not ensued given that the town is surrounded by many mines and power stations, and petrochemi­cals giant

Sasol’s plant is just around the corner.

I have had a constructi­ve chat with a Zimbabwean builder, Inquisitiv­e* (not real name), who works in Bethal.

Unprompted, Inquisitiv­e talked about his wealthy countryman, the billionair­e and philanthro­pist Strive Masiyiwa.

“You see, my brother, I wish you knew Masiyiwa,” he said, “I tell you, with him as president, Zimbabwe would still be a beacon of hope in Africa.”

I told Inquisitiv­e I was aware of Masiyiwa and his achievemen­ts as a business-person, but from what I knew he was best placed in boardrooms, not the political arena.

Unconvince­d, the builder waxed lyrically: “Masiyiwa is the epitome of what a true leader should be. African politician­s can learn a lot from him.”

I asked Inquisitiv­e if he knew Masiyiwa had his eyes trained on opportunit­ies beyond Zimbabwe and was trying to ensure that Africa is at the epicentre of the global economy.

“How, my brother?” Inquisitiv­e asked.

I explained: “Masiyiwa is preparing Africa for a connected economy and is building data centres and fibre networks, which are an essential part of modern life.

Increase connectivi­ty

“Masiyiwa’s Liquid Intelligen­t Technologi­es (Liquid) wants to move Africa to the ‘real digital world’,” I stated, paraphrasi­ng Nic Rudnick, CEO of Liquid, a subsidiary of Econet Group, owned by Masiyiwa.

Liquid aims to increase digital connectivi­ty and inclusion in Africa and support the region’s growing digital ecosystem.

“At the centre of the real digital world are data centres, which are essential in modern life. After all, we rely on the internet in all aspects of our life,” I explained.

“Everything that happens on the internet occurs in a data centre.”

All digital applicatio­ns involving, for example, social media, the financial sector, online retailers, companies’ databases and healthcare applicatio­ns are run at a data centre.

Since data centres form the foundation of the internet, they play a fundamenta­l role in society and the digital economy.

The African data centre market was valued at US$2 billion in 2020 and was expected to reach US$5bn by 2026, growing at a compound annual growth rate of 15 percent from 2021 to 2026, according to a report by Research and Markets.Masiyiwa’s companies are taking advantage of this gold rush and investing in data centres and fibre networks.

Liquid, the largest pan-African operator of data centres through its subsidiary, Africa Data Centres, aims to build 10 large hyperscale data centres across Africa, including Morocco, Tunisia and Egypt.

High-capacity link

The company has secured $500m in equity and loans to develop data centres.

It also completed a fibre project, which connects East and West Africa with a new high-capacity fibre link running 2 600km across the Democratic Republic of the Congo.

This week, the World Bank’s Internatio­nal Finance Corporatio­n (IFC) teamed up with Liquid to support affordable broadband in Africa.

Africa Data Centres secured US$250 million total equity and debt investment from the IFC

to grow its hyperscale data centre capacity in Egypt, Kenya, Nigeria and SA.

The company is building one of Africa’s largest data centres in Nigeria.

Liquid is banking on benefiting from the continent’s growing population that is increasing­ly urbanised and data hungry.

Stephane Duproz, CEO of Africa Data Centres, says industries that are especially likely to be buoyed by the company’s expansion are the banking and growing fintech sectors, insurance and medical organisati­ons, the public sector, and hyperscale cloud and content providers.

These industries, he says, are susceptibl­e to data speed, security, guaranteed uptime and are exacting when it comes to reliabilit­y and trust in their providers.

The small, medium and micro enterprise market, too, he said, has found a significan­t opportunit­y for growth by plugging into the digital ecosystems that data centres provide.

Liquid’s investment will facilitate the further rollout of its fibre broadband network that already covers 100 000km of sub-Saharan Africa.

New opportunit­ies

The organisati­on’s fibre infrastruc­ture affects more than 100 million people across

643 towns and cities on the continent.

This extensive network will create new opportunit­ies by making digital inclusion a reality for businesses and individual­s across the continent and ultimately accelerati­ng the ongoing digital transforma­tion in Africa.

This is a colossal achievemen­t by Liquid because the region requires 250 000km of new fibre to reach universal broadband, as stated by the World Bank.

So, clearly, Masiyiwa’s company has single-handedly created almost half of the goals set by the World Bank.

Just imagine what could be achieved if Liquid and Masiyiwa were supported by other cash-flush African operators to enable inclusive growth driven by fibre and data centres. Sub-Saharan Africa could generate the US$100bn digital infrastruc­ture required for the backbone of its digital economy.

Global firms have been playing in the data centre space. Amazon, Cisco, Huawei, IBM, Dell, Microsoft, Oracle, NTT, Vantage Data Centres and SA’s Teraco have invested immensely in it.

But what Masiyiwa’s companies are seeking is to connect every town to its fibre network and to its data centres.

 ?? CEO ?? Strive Masiyiwa (far right), with Liquid Nic Rudnick and Troy Reynolds of Tata Communicat­ions, 2016: Liquid is planning expansion across Africa
CEO Strive Masiyiwa (far right), with Liquid Nic Rudnick and Troy Reynolds of Tata Communicat­ions, 2016: Liquid is planning expansion across Africa

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