An ambitious data center project stalls due to insufficient electrical capacity.
Kenya is positioning itself as Africa’s Silicon Savannah and its premier tech hub. Touting itself as a “full-package investment destination,” part of the strategy has been encouraging global tech giants to set up operations in the country.
Lately, however, the plan has run into a roadblock: electrical capacity.
Pull back to May 2024, when Microsoft Corp., in partnership with G42, an Emirati-based AI developer, unveiled plans to invest $1 billion in a data center in Kenya powered by geothermal energy.
Described as the single largest and broadest digital investment in the country’s history, the center would be the heartbeat of a digitally led economy in Kenya and the wider East Africa region, anchored in AI and cloud-computing services.
Two years later, the project has been abandoned on account of too little electricity to power the center.
According to G42, the facility was supposed to be located some 100 kilometers northwest of Nairobi, the epicenter of geothermal energy production. Initially, it would have required 100 megawatts of electricity to run, but when fully operational, 1 gigawatt.
The Power Bottleneck
For a country whose installed electricity capacity stands at only 3,840 MW (3.8 GW), and where national connectivity is approximately 76%, the realization was astounding.
“To switch on that one data center, we would need to shut off power for half the country,” said President William Ruto at a recent state event. “That’s when I knew there was a problem.” Kenya continues to lose high-value investments due to low electricity capacity, he conceded; to attract and secure investment, it needs at least 10 GW.
That leaves Kenya with no ongoing power generation projects or plans for more in the future.
The stalling of the data center is bad news for Microsoft. The tech giant saw East Africa as a ripe market for its Azure products and other cloud and AI-powered solutions for businesses and the public sector. A key focus was to help governments digitize operations and service delivery, starting with Kenya, which has indicated plans to move more of its services to the cloud. Another goal was to help startups, entrepreneurs, and organizations build a digital ecosystem offering critical solutions to key sectors of the economy.