- iXAfrica Data Centres will host Oracle Cloud Infrastructure’s first public cloud region in Nairobi, Kenya, expanding local compute capacity.
- The collaboration supports digital sovereignty by keeping cloud storage and compute local, cutting reliance on Western data centres.
What happened: iXAfrica secures oracle cloud region to localise compute in Kenya
iXAfrica Data Centres Ltd, East and Central Africa’s largest hyperscale, carrier-neutral, AI-ready facility, has been selected by Oracle to host the company’s first Oracle Cloud Infrastructure (OCI) public cloud region in Kenya. The announcement comes more than two years after Kenyan President William Ruto first unveiled plans for the region in January 2024, and it marks a major milestone for local cloud infrastructure development.
iXAfrica’s campus, designed and built to global cloud standards, combines resilient power, high-density AI capability, and proximity to key connectivity infrastructure such as submarine cable landing points and national fibre routes. This ready-to-deploy environment is now positioned to support Oracle’s full suite of cloud services, enabling organisations across Kenya and neighbouring countries to run critical workloads locally, rather than routing data through servers in Europe, South Africa or North America.
Snehar Shah, CEO of iXAfrica, said the collaboration takes the company “into execution mode” to bring OCI to Kenya, leveraging renewable energy and local talent alongside expansive connectivity. Oracle’s David Bunei, Country Leader for Kenya, emphasised that the partnership will bolster the country’s digital economy by providing secure, scalable infrastructure for mission-critical applications.
Also Read: Microsoft takes on Nvidia with a home-grown AI chip
Also Read: French rivals circle SFR as consolidation pressure mounts
Why it’s important
For technology enterprises, cloud providers and developers, this development represents a structural shift in African digital infrastructure — from dependence on overseas cloud regions to local compute sovereignty. By hosting a full OCI region in Nairobi, iXAfrica helps reduce latency, improve data sovereignty and lower reliance on foreign data centres, directly addressing key barriers that have slowed cloud adoption across the region.
Localised cloud compute means that sensitive workloads — from fintech and government systems to AI and analytics platforms — can be processed within Kenyan borders, helping organisations meet regulatory compliance and performance needs. For the broader African tech ecosystem, having a full public cloud region on the continent signals that major cloud players are prepared to invest in local infrastructure rather than exporting data traffic overseas. This lays a foundation for more sovereign, competitive and resilient digital economies and creates new opportunities for partners, developers and enterprise IT teams focused on cloud-native innovation.
