Close Menu
  • Home
  • Latest News
  • Top stories
  • Local News
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Entertainment
  • More
    • Sports
    • Nollywood
    • Tech
    • Editorial
    • Health
    • World
    • Lifestyle
  • Africa
    • Kenya
    • Nigeria
    • South Africa
Sports

2026 FIFA World Cup: Carlos Queiroz must begin to play attacking football – Ntow Gyan

June 25, 2026

Queiroz Questions VAR In Ghana-England Draw

June 25, 2026

Former Kotoko captain Samba O’Neil joins Sekhukhune United on a two-year deal

June 25, 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Ghanamma.comGhanamma.com
  • Home
  • Latest News

    2026 FIFA World Cup: Carlos Queiroz must begin to play attacking football – Ntow Gyan

    June 25, 2026

    Minority criticises latest utility tariff hike, calls increases “broken promise”

    June 25, 2026

    South Africa producer inflation accelerates to 7.8% y/y in May

    June 25, 2026

    Keche Joshua Opens Up on Fame, Struggles, and Group Unity in Candid Interview

    June 25, 2026

    Queiroz Questions VAR In Ghana-England Draw

    June 25, 2026
  • Top stories
  • Local News
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Entertainment
  • More
    • Sports
    • Nollywood
    • Tech
    • Editorial
    • Health
    • World
    • Lifestyle
  • Africa
    • Kenya
    • Nigeria
    • South Africa
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest Vimeo
Subscribe
Ghanamma.comGhanamma.com
Home»Technology»Experts Flag Gaps in Ghana’s New AI Strategy Document
Technology

Experts Flag Gaps in Ghana’s New AI Strategy Document

Ghana NewsBy Ghana NewsApril 30, 2026No Comments3 Mins Read
Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email Copy Link

Artificial Intelligence
Artificial Intelligence

Ghana’s newly launched National Artificial Intelligence (AI) Strategy for 2025 to 2035, unveiled by President John Dramani Mahama in Accra on April 24, is drawing scrutiny from industry specialists who say internal inconsistencies and unresolved governance questions could complicate its ambitious implementation agenda.

Desmond Israel, founder and lead consultant at Information Security Architects Ltd, identified what he described as a “mechanical revision” of an earlier policy framework, pointing to sections of the strategy that retain language referencing a 2033 endpoint, consistent with a previous 2023 to 2033 draft, despite the document being positioned as a fresh ten-year roadmap through 2035.

“National strategies are built around timelines. If those timelines are inconsistent within the same document, it weakens confidence in execution planning,” Israel said. He also questioned the methodology section, which cites stakeholder consultations conducted in 2022 without clearly indicating whether new engagements informed the latest version.

On governance, Israel raised concerns about the strategy’s institutional architecture. The document references a Responsible AI Authority, a Responsible AI Office, and a National AI Office without defining their respective mandates or how they would relate to one another. “AI policy is governance infrastructure, not branding. Without clearly defined institutions, implementation risks becoming fragmented,” he said.

Separately, digital creator and cybersecurity analyst Hector Dotse said the more consequential issue is what the strategy leaves unresolved. While he commended what he called an “honest diagnostic” of Ghana’s current position and praised the document’s one-trillion-token target for Ghanaian language datasets by 2030 as one of its most compelling commitments, he identified three major decisions that remain deferred.

The strategy sets a GH¢200 billion private investment target but does not outline the instruments required to mobilise that capital. It also stops short of specifying a regulatory model, leaving open whether Ghana will adopt a risk-based framework similar to the European Union (EU), a sector-led approach like the United Kingdom (UK), a state-coordinated model comparable to China, or sandbox-driven regulation as practised in Singapore. Additionally, Dotse noted the absence of procurement principles ahead of major infrastructure commitments, including a planned national AI compute centre.

“None of these requires reopening the strategy,” Dotse said. “All of them require follow-on documents in the coming months.” He warned that the principal risk was not outright failure but gradual misalignment between the strategy’s ambitions and its implementation architecture.

The strategy targets a GH¢500 billion contribution of AI to gross domestic product (GDP) by 2035 and is built around eight pillars covering education, infrastructure, data governance, innovation, and public sector adoption. A recent pilot assessment by the African AI Governance Index placed Ghana in the “emerging” category with a score of 35.7, below several continental peers, with analysts noting the gap lies less in vision than in regulatory follow-through.

Both experts said Ghana’s AI ambitions remain achievable but stressed that closing the gap between policy intent and execution would require tightening the framework in the months ahead.

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
Ghana News
  • Website

Related Posts

Trident Digital Tech’s Sikaflow Platform Revolutionizes Ghana’s MSME Sector with Unified Digital Financial Infrastructure

June 25, 2026

Trident Digital Tech Introduces Sikaflow: A Comprehensive Digital Financial Platform to Formalize Ghana’s MSME Sector

June 24, 2026

Ghana Plans National Document Wallet With Multiple Private Providers

June 24, 2026
Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

You must be logged in to post a comment.

Top Posts

Trident Digital Tech’s Sikaflow Platform Revolutionizes Ghana’s MSME Sector with Unified Digital Financial Infrastructure

June 25, 20260 Views

Trident Digital Tech Introduces Sikaflow: A Comprehensive Digital Financial Platform to Formalize Ghana’s MSME Sector

June 24, 20260 Views

Ghana Plans National Document Wallet With Multiple Private Providers

June 24, 20260 Views

MTN Ghana Slashes Fibre Broadband Prices by Over 70% to Boost Internet Access

June 23, 20260 Views

MTN Ghana Revolutionizes Internet Access with Over 70% Fibre Broadband Price Cut – A Game-Changer for Digital Ghana

June 23, 20260 Views
About Us
About Us

Ghanamma is an independent digital news platform delivering timely updates and reliable information across politics, business, technology, health, entertainment, sports, and world affairs, helping readers stay informed through trustworthy journalism and meaningful insights.

Facebook X (Twitter) Pinterest YouTube WhatsApp
World News

South Sudan’s leader sacks aides after dead man appointed

February 4, 2026

South African white separatists claim land acquired from Zulu king then lost to British

February 2, 2026

Muhoozi’s outbursts expose Uganda’s unease with funding Somalia war

February 2, 2026
Top stories

University of Ghana Attributes Fee Increases to Student Leadership Charges

January 2, 20260 Views

Sam Jonah, 3 Others Cleared Of Criminal Charges In River Park Estate Dispute In Nigeria

January 2, 20260 Views

GCNH donates health logistics to Ho Municipal Health Directorate  

January 2, 20260 Views
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Cookies Policy
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms & Conditions
  • Disclaimer
© 2026 Ghanamma. Designed by Ghanamma.

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.