国产AV

Artificial intelligence and Africa

Get monthly
e-newsletter

Artificial intelligence and Africa

Experts say supportive policies and robust infrastructure key for tech opportunities
From Africa Renewal: 
7 March 2024
By: 

Africa needs supportive policies and robust infrastructure to tap the limitless opportunities of Artificial intelligence to leapfrog its development, experts have said.

Speaking at a panel discussion on听鈥楩ostering prosperity through policies on artificial intelligence in Africa鈥,听on the sidelines of the 56th Session of the Economic Commission for Africa Conference of African Ministers of Finance, Planning and Economic Development (COM), experts agreed that Artificial Intelligence presented massive development opportunities for Africa if the right policies and infrastructure were in place.听

Ousman Bah, Minister of Communications and Digital Economy of Gambia, said it was important to have the right policies to regulate the use of AI and also avert its risks, but Africa should not wait to have the regulations in place to embrace the technology.

Artificial intelligence, a fast-evolving technology that taps the intelligence of machines or software is transforming all social spheres globally.听

Research shows that the technology has the potential to contribute up to $15.7 trillion to the global economy by 2030, of which $1.2 trillion could be generated in Africa, representing a 5.6 per cent increase in the continent鈥檚 gross domestic product by 2030.

Fayaz King, Deputy Executive Director, Field Results and Innovation for the United Nations Children鈥檚 Fund (UNICEF), said necessary strategies were important to ensure that all approaches to AI from development,听 deployment to use are in the public interest.

鈥淚n the effervescent realm of AI, the known,听 the unknown and the unknowable is best addressed through governance with humanity at its centre, for what AI giveth, AI also taketh,鈥澨 Mr. King said, underscoring the need to bridge the digital divide by including marginalized communities in the AI initiatives.

Baratang Miya, Chief Executive of Girlhype Coders Academy, said governments should regulate and incentivise stakeholders across AI value chains with focus on Small Medium Scale Enterprises to foster innovation and equitable access to AI technologies.

Ms. Baratang said there should be a balance in policy development and humanity to ensure that the AI technology does take over. Government needs to establish ethical frameworks on the development and deployment of AI through data privacy, security, transparency and accountability in AI systems.

听Africa needs to collect more data to have access to its own data and governments need to facilitate data democratization policies.

鈥淲e really need data that speaks to Africa itself and that case for open data means we are empowering citizens and at the same time encouraging innovation and efficiency and not using data that is inaccurate,鈥 said Miya, emphasizing that听 to host proper data for countries, good cloud infrastructure, including reliable electricity access are important.

Sandra Makumbirofa, Senior economist, Research ICT Africa, said AI has transformative potential to boost African economies through effective financial inclusion , employment creation and enhanced public service delivery.听

However, most of the market value of AI was realised听 in in United States and China, she said, citing research by UNCTAD. It was therefore important for African countries to actively participate in global fora to ensure their interests were represented.

鈥淥ur database is inadequate for global policy making,鈥 Ms. Makumbirofa noted. 鈥淭he data that we have as African countries is not represented in the training of AI models. This means that the AI that we are using in Africa from foreign countries does not necessarily have the African context and therefore we are not able to use them efficiently as we can.鈥

Contributing to the discussion, which was moderated by Dorothy Ooko, Head of听Communications and Public Affairs for Africa at Google, the UNECA Executive Secretary, Claver Gatete, highlighted that most people were not aware of AI and a drawback of AI was its dependence on data which has to be accurate.

Mr. Gatete said the development of infrastructure such as internet connectivity was key to tapping the benefits of AI and that the technology must be shared among countries to avoid inventing the wheel.

鈥淥ut of the 1.6 billion people who are not connected,听 Africa really is one of the biggest places where we are not connected. If you are not connected you cannot even talk about AI. We need infrastructure, we need energy investment going hand in hand with the IT infrastructure,鈥 said Mr. Gatete.