Dr Krishnan Ranganath has taken on a new role as Chief Executive Officer of UniCloud Africa Limited, weeks after leaving his position at Africa Data Centres where he led operations in West Africa.
He announced the move in a LinkedIn post on Monday, confirming he had stepped into the leadership role as the company expands across Africa’s fast-growing cloud infrastructure market.
“I’m happy to share that I’m starting a new role as Chief Executive Officer at UniCloud Africa Limited. Throughout my career, I’ve championed a dual-track approach: scaling technological breakthroughs while maintaining rigorous operational excellence.”
He continued, “UniCloud sits at the epicentre of Africa’s cloud evolution. We are committed to deploying 100% sovereign infrastructure across the continent, and I am driven to lead our strategic expansion across several vital markets.”
“My focus is on driving high-growth partnerships and scaling the next generation of resilient, sustainable cloud infrastructure.”
He added that instantaneous changes in technology and energy will impact the next phase of digital development across Africa.
“While the challenges from Al integration to the green energy transition are immense, the opportunities are greater. I am eager to collaborate with our partners and customers to redefine the digital frontier and accelerate the evolution of the African digital ecosystem.”
Dr Krishnan Ranganath moves into the role after more than five years at Africa Data Centres, one of the continent’s largest data centre operators.
During that period, he oversaw the company’s expansion in West Africa, helping to grow its infrastructure footprint in Nigeria and neighbouring markets as demand for cloud services increased.
When he earlier confirmed his departure from the company, he reflected on the work done in the region.
“What started as a mission to navigate the complexities of a new market has evolved into a chapter of immense growth. We didn’t just build data centres; we built the foundation for West Africa’s digital future.”
The leadership change comes at a time when Africa’s cloud and data infrastructure sector is entering a new phase of growth.
Data show the continent’s data centre and cloud infrastructure market could expand from about $2.2 billion in 2026 to more than $4.3 billion by 2031, driven by demand from banks, telecom companies, governments and fast-growing digital businesses.
Capacity demand is also increasing with projections that Africa’s data-centre power capacity will climb from about 0.4 gigawatts today to between 1.5 and 2.2 gigawatts by 2030, a change that could attract between $10 billion and $20 billion in new investment across the continent.
Another change impacting the industry is the growing focus on sovereign cloud infrastructure. Governments across Africa are pushing for data generated locally to remain within national borders, a policy aimed at strengthening digital sovereignty and protecting critical systems.
In Nigeria, technology regulators, such as the National Information Technology Development Agency (NITDA), have been working on frameworks designed to consolidate government digital systems into a nationally governed cloud environment. This aims to secure sensitive public data while encouraging local infrastructure development.
Nonetheless, cloud adoption in Nigeria is still behind compared to developed markets. Estimates show that by 2025 only about 35% of Nigerian enterprises had moved to cloud platforms, compared with roughly 60% in South Africa.
However, adoption is increasing as new data centres, fibre networks and local cloud services come online.
Dr Krishnan Ranganath now steps into the leadership of UniCloud Africa at a moment when competition for Africa’s digital infrastructure market is getting stronger.
The company positions itself around sovereign cloud architecture, local infrastructure ownership and energy-efficient systems designed to support Africa’s growing digital economy.
His appointment also follows earlier recognitions. In February 2026, he received the Icon of Innovation and Digital Transformation in Africa award at the CIO and C-Suite Awards, acknowledging his work in expanding digital infrastructure and technology partnerships across the continent.
Dr Ranganath is now focused on scaling cloud capacity across multiple African markets while building partnerships with governments, telecom operators and enterprises moving their systems online.




