Open Access Data Centres – Tech | Business | Economy https://techeconomy.ng Tech | Business | Economy Tue, 17 Feb 2026 17:42:18 +0000 en-GB hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=7.0 https://techeconomy.ng/wp-content/uploads/2025/06/cropped-256Px-32x32.png Open Access Data Centres – Tech | Business | Economy https://techeconomy.ng 32 32 Africa Holds Just 0.6% Global Data Centre Capacity as $60bn AI Drive Spurs 1.2GW Expansion by 2030 https://techeconomy.ng/africa-data-centre-capacity-0-6-percent-ai-1-2gw-2030/ https://techeconomy.ng/africa-data-centre-capacity-0-6-percent-ai-1-2gw-2030/#respond Tue, 17 Feb 2026 17:42:18 +0000 https://techeconomy.ng/?p=176346 Africa accounts for only 0.6% of global data centre capacity, even as global investment in the sector is set to hit $3 trillion over the next five years. 

That contrast was revealed in a new report, which shows the continent is building fast, but still lagging.

The study, Data Centres in Africa 2026, says Africa’s total installed capacity is expected to triple to about 1.2 gigawatts (GW) of IT load by 2030.

But then, this growth will track global expansion rather than close the gap. The United States alone hosts about 45% of the world’s data centres.

Globally, the data centre market was valued at $243 billion in 2025 and is projected to double by 2032.

Artificial intelligence is a primary driver. McKinsey estimates AI training and inference could triple global demand for data centre capacity by 2030, with 70% of new demand linked to AI workloads.

In comparison, Africa’s footprint is small. The continent has between 220 and 230 facilities spread across 38 countries.

Capacity is concentrated in South Africa, Nigeria, Kenya and Egypt. Most African data is still stored abroad, mainly in Europe and North America.

That reliance brings the risks. Data hosted overseas falls under foreign laws. The report points to the U.S. CLOUD Act, which allows American authorities to compel companies under U.S. jurisdiction to hand over data, regardless of where it is physically stored.

This leaves governments and businesses in Africa asking who really controls their data and whether they truly have authority over it.

More than 40 African countries have enacted data protection laws, and 19 have ratified the Malabo Convention on cybersecurity and data protection.

However, enforcement capacity usually lags behind legislation. Investors now see regulatory clarity as an important factor in deciding where to build.

Dr Ayotunde Coker, CEO of Open Access Data Centres, said: “Africa’s path to data sovereignty depends on building local processing power, sustainable energy use, and AI capacity that reflects the continent’s own priorities and realities.”

AI is changing the direction. In April 2025, African states adopted the Africa Declaration on Artificial Intelligence in Kigali.

The declaration commits $60 billion towards continental AI ambitions and led to the creation of an Africa AI Council made up of seven ICT ministers and eight independent members.

So far, 15 African countries have adopted a national AI strategy or policy. Still, infrastructure is not satisfactory.

According to the report, outside South Africa, only about one-third of built data centre capacity is fully utilised. Even in South Africa, 74% of capacity is fitted out and in use.

Operators say they are building ahead of demand, planning on 10- to 20-year horizons.

The demand side is still uneven. While 47% of Africans are mobile subscribers, only 28% use mobile internet.

In some low-income countries, internet access can take up to 26.4% of average monthly income. The physical coverage gap has narrowed to 9%, but the usage gap stands at 64%.

At the same time, data consumption per smartphone in sub-Saharan Africa averages about 6.7GB per month, far below the global average of 21.6GB.

The International Finance Corporation estimates that doubling undersea cable capacity could cut bandwidth prices by 30 to 50%. Even moderate price drops could push usage steeply higher.

Connectivity is expanding. Africa’s terrestrial fibre network reached about 1.3 million kilometres in 2025, up from 1 million kilometres in 2019.

The World Bank approved $500 million in late 2025 to deploy a further 90,000 kilometres of fibre. Egypt now connects to more than 19 subsea cable systems, Djibouti to 12, and South Africa to 11.

However, access to computing power is limited. Latency from African users to major cloud regions abroad usually exceeds 70 to 100 milliseconds, compared with less than 20 milliseconds in mature markets.

Where local cloud regions exist, such as in South Africa, median latency falls to between 35 and 45 milliseconds.

The report describes this as a “compute divide”. It argues that competitiveness will depend more on where computing capacity sits and how close it is to users, not just connectivity,

Investment is flowing in response. Hyperscalers and technology investors are estimated to have committed between $2.5 billion and $4 billion to African data centres in recent years.

Development finance institutions have put in an estimated $1.5 billion to $2 billion since 2016. Commercial banks, private equity firms and sovereign investors have also stepped up.

Private equity-backed platforms such as Raxio and Actis-backed Digital Realty have pursued regional expansion. Telecom-linked operators including Africa Data Centres, Nxtra by Airtel and STELLARIX are carving out carrier-neutral facilities while leveraging existing fibre networks.

Governments are building national facilities as well. Nigeria’s Galaxy Backbone, Ghana’s National Data Centre, Rwanda’s National Data Centre and state-backed projects in Ethiopia and Togo aim to anchor government cloud services and sensitive public data locally.

The economics are demanding, with building a standard Tier III facility globally now costing about $11.3 million per megawatt.

For AI-ready sites, tenant fit-out costs alone can reach $15 million to $25 million per megawatt. In Africa, operators face additional expenses linked to power back-up systems and imported equipment, with generators sometimes taking up to 18 months to deliver.

Occupancy can also take time. The report says it may take up to eight years for a new African data centre to reach 85% occupancy.

Yashnath Issur, CEO of Nxtra by Airtel Africa, said: “Developing large-scale infrastructure, such as a 40-MW data centre, fundamentally transforms the economic model of the industry.

“Beyond unlocking significant economies of scale in both construction and operations, this level of capacity also strengthens our position when negotiating long-term power purchase agreements. The result is greater cost predictability, improved energy security, and a more resilient foundation for sustainable growth.”

Talent is another pressure point, with Uptime Institute projecting the global industry will require 2.5 million full-time staff by the end of 2025.

In Africa, 39% of operators quote retention of skilled staff as their main human resources challenge. In Nigeria, that figure reaches 67%.

To respond, experts launched the Data Centre Talent Project for Africa in 2025. The three-month programme aims to enrol more than 100 engineering graduates in its pilot phase across Nigeria, Kenya and South Africa, with at least 30 job placements in the first cycle.

Despite the challenges, the report concludes that Africa’s digital economy could reach $1.5 trillion by 2030.

For that to happen, Africa data centre capacity will need to move from scarce infrastructure to becoming a reliable, local backbone for cloud services, AI and public systems.

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Top Data Centre & Cloud Projects to Watch in 2026 https://techeconomy.ng/top-data-centre-cloud-projects-nigeria-2026/ https://techeconomy.ng/top-data-centre-cloud-projects-nigeria-2026/#respond Wed, 07 Jan 2026 08:08:05 +0000 https://techeconomy.ng/?p=173743 In just two years, Nigeria’s data centre market has moved from slow growth to commendable scale. 

Installed capacity, which sat at just under 70MW in 2024, is projected to reach about 330–340MW by 2026, a fivefold expansion that few emerging markets can reach. 

That scale of expansion results from high demand from cloud providers, financial institutions, digital platforms and AI-driven services that can no longer depend on offshore infrastructure without paying the price in latency, cost and compliance.

Valued between $280 to 300 million today, the market is expected to approach $670 million by 2030, with investments over $1.7 billion by 2027. 

Colocation revenue alone is forecast to grow from about $251 million in 2025 to almost $580 million by 2030, growing at a pace of over 18% a year. 

Hyperscale campuses, carrier-neutral sites and well-engineered Tier III and IV facilities designed for dense, powerful workloads are driving this growth. 

Interestingly, nearly 70% of new data centre capacity planned for West Africa is being developed locally, anchoring Lagos as the region’s primary hyperscale and interconnection hub.

Supported by nationwide fibre initiatives such as Project BRIDGE, which aims to lay 90,000 kilometres of fibre across the country, and a digital economy projected to contribute up to $180 billion to Africa’s GDP by 2026, the foundations are now in place.

Taken together, these explain why 2026 has a lot in store to look forward to. This is the year Nigeria’s data centre market gains larger scale and competitiveness.

These top data centre and cloud projects to watch in 2026 are laying the foundations for how data, cloud and AI will work in Africa’s largest economy.

1. 21st Century Technologies’ 50MW Hyperscale Facility, Ikeja

What makes 21st Century Technologies’ Ikeja project impossible to ignore in 2026 is not just its size, but its intent. At 50MW, this is one of the largest hyperscale builds in West Africa, but its vision goes deeper. 

The facility is being designed for a phase where artificial intelligence, sovereign cloud and national data control are immediate needs. With demand for AI compute increasing across Africa, power and reliability have become the battlegrounds. This project faces that reality head-to-head.

The Ikeja site is engineered to Tier IV standards, with full N+2 redundancy across power, cooling and network layers. That is important because AI and mission-critical cloud workloads do not tolerate downtime. This facility will set a new benchmark for resilience in Nigeria’s data centre market. 

Its AI-ready architecture supports both hyperscale cloud providers and enterprises running heavy models locally, reducing dependence on offshore infrastructure and latency-prone routes. With open-access connectivity and a newly deployed regional network gateway, 21CTL is turning Ikeja into a serious interconnection hub.

This is a homegrown Nigerian hyperscale project at a time when most large facilities are foreign-owned. In 2026, data sovereignty will matter more than ever, especially for governments, banks and AI developers working with sensitive datasets. 

In combining scale, local leadership and global partnerships, 21st Century Technologies is going beyond adding capacity to laying down infrastructure that supports economic growth, skilled jobs and Africa’s long-term digital independence. That is why this project belongs strongly on any watchlist.

2. Airtel Africa’s 38MW Nxtra Hyperscale Data Centre, Eko Atlantic

Airtel Africa’s Nxtra facility at Eko Atlantic is unique because it is being built for the next wave of computing, not the last one. At 38MW, this carrier-neutral hyperscale data centre expands Nigeria’s capacity at a time when AI workloads are rewriting the laws of data centre design. 

High-density racks, GPU-ready halls and serious power planning are now highly indispensable. Nxtra is leaning fully into that transition.

Location is a strategic advantage here. Eko Atlantic provides direct proximity to major subsea cable routes and fibre corridors, translating into lower latency and stronger international reach. For cloud providers and enterprises, this is important. 

In 2026, the ability to deploy AI and cloud services locally, while staying tightly connected to global platforms, will define competitiveness. We expect this facility to attract both hyperscalers and regional platforms looking for neutral ground in Lagos’ fast-crowding data centre sector.

Beyond capacity, Nxtra’s importance lies in timing and scale. Backed by over $120 million in investment and scheduled to go live in early 2026, it arrives just as Nigeria’s cloud market enters its next growth phase. 

Its targeted power efficiency, multiple substations and regulatory alignment give it an edge with fintechs, telecoms and data-heavy enterprises under pressure to keep data onshore. 

This points to the fact that telecom operators now see data centres as core to Africa’s digital economy, not a side business.

3. Open Access Data Centres’ 24MW Hyperscale Expansion, Ilasan

Open Access Data Centres’ Ilasan project earns its place on this list because it solves one of Nigeria’s biggest digital problems, which is connectivity at scale. 

Expanding from 2MW to a planned 24MW by 2026, the Ilasan site is designed to serve hyperscalers, cloud platforms and AI-driven enterprises that demand both power and speed. Sitting directly next to the Equiano subsea cable landing station, it provides one of the lowest-latency environments in West Africa.

What truly differentiates this project is its open-access model. Carrier neutrality means choice, and choice drives competition, resilience and better pricing. Through its Open Access Fabric, OADC is effectively collapsing the distance between Lagos and Europe, making global cloud services feel local. 

With more workloads staying in-country to meet data protection regulations, facilities like Ilasan become strategic assets rather than simple colocation sites.

The scale of investment, $240 million committed as part of an African expansion plan, cannot be ignored. This project reveals a high confidence level in Nigeria’s digital growth. Sustainability is being built in from the start, with renewable energy integration and efficient design reducing long-term operating risk. 

In 2026, success will favour data centres that balance scale, connectivity and cost discipline. OADC’s Ilasan facility does exactly that, positioning Lagos as a regional hub ready to take its place in the global cloud and AI infrastructure map.

4. MTN’s Dabengwa Data and Cloud Centre, Lagos

MTN’s Dabengwa Data and Cloud Centre earns its place on this list of top data centre and cloud projects to watch in 2026 because it represents a transition in how large-scale digital infrastructure is being delivered in West Africa. 

Launched in 2025 and already seeing demand outpace supply, the facility is the region’s largest prefabricated modular data centre. That is important in 2026, when speed, flexibility and reliability are no longer nice-to-haves. At full build-out, the centre provides 9MW of Tier III capacity, designed to scale in phases as demand continues to rise.

What’s most interesting is the build approach. Using 96 prefabricated containers across three floors, the centre was designed to deploy faster, expand cleanly and maintain high resilience under pressure. 

This is a practical response to Nigeria’s infrastructure situation. The modular design allows MTN to add capacity without long construction cycles, while Tier III certification ensures uptime for cloud, enterprise and public sector workloads. Early adoption by government agencies and enterprises shows that trust is already in place.

In 2026, the Dabengwa Centre will not be judged just by size, but by impact. It is already supporting cloud platforms, fintech services and government systems aligned with Nigeria’s digital economy agenda. 

With strong partnerships and deep local market reach, MTN is using this facility to anchor cloud services closer to users and institutions. That combination of scale, speed and adoption is why this project deserves close attention.

5. Kasi Cloud LOS1 Hyperscale Data Centre, Lekki

Kasi Cloud’s LOS1 project is ambitious by any standard, and ambition is exactly why it belongs on this watchlist. Planned as a 100MW hyperscale campus backed by a $250 million investment, LOS1 is designed to operate at a scale Nigeria has not seen before. 

In 2026, scale will be more important than ever. Cloud providers and large platforms are no longer looking for incremental capacity. They want room to grow, and LOS1 is being built to provide it.

Location and backing strengthen the case. Situated on the Lekki Peninsula and supported by the Nigeria Sovereign Investment Authority, LOS1 combines strategic geography with sovereign confidence. 

The facility is designed as a carrier-neutral interconnection hub, built to attract global cloud platforms while supporting local digital services. 

Nigeria is not just a consumer of cloud services, but also a host for regional digital infrastructure.

Sustainability pushes LOS1 even further ahead. With a target of 95% renewable energy usage, the project sets a new benchmark for green hyperscale development in Africa. In 2026, energy efficiency will be a deciding factor for hyperscalers weighing long-term operating costs and risk. 

LOS1’s focus on clean power, massive capacity and interconnection makes it a cornerstone project that will change how the world views West Africa.

6. Jovis Nigeria Data Centre, Victoria Island

The Jovis Nigeria Data Centre is among the top data centre and cloud projects to watch in 2026 because it shows where demand is heading, not where it has been. 

Located in Victoria Island, the country’s financial and commercial nerve centre, the project seeks to serve banks, fintechs, corporates and digital platforms that need low latency and local hosting. 

In 2026, proximity will be essential. Data-heavy services cannot afford distance when speed and compliance are on the line.

This project is also part of a growth wave changing Nigeria’s data centre market. With hundreds of megawatts of new capacity expected by 2026, competition will increase, and only well-located, well-built facilities will thrive. 

Jovis benefits from experienced delivery partners and a Tier III design approach that aligns with enterprise and regulatory needs. This is a measured, useful addition to Lagos’ fast-growing infrastructure base.

What makes Jovis one to watch is timing. As data localisation regulations tighten and open banking and digital public services expand, demand for secure domestic hosting will increase. 

Facilities like this help reduce reliance on offshore infrastructure while creating local jobs and skills. In 2026, the Jovis Data Centre will not just be another site in Lagos. It will be a pointer to how Nigeria’s digital economy is getting stronger, one project at a time.

7. Equinix LG3, Lagos

Equinix LG3 is key in 2026 because it marks a turning point, not an expansion. This is the first ground-up Equinix facility in West Africa, and it reveals a deeper, long-term commitment to Nigeria as a regional connectivity hub. 

While earlier presence came through acquisition, LG3 is purpose-built, designed from day one to integrate Lagos into Equinix’s global interconnection platform. That alone changes how international businesses view Nigeria.

Lagos already sits at the crossroads of multiple subsea cable systems, and LG3 is built to convert geography into economic advantage. By bringing global interconnection services directly into Victoria Island, Equinix is shortening the distance between Nigerian enterprises and global markets. 

This facility is expected to become a magnet for multinational firms, cloud platforms and fast-growing local companies that need secure, low-latency access to partners and customers worldwide.

What to watch in 2026 is not just occupancy, but influence. With LG3 going live in the first quarter and backed by a $100 million Africa expansion plan, Equinix is embedding Nigeria into its worldwide fabric of interconnected data centres. 

That pushes Lagos from a regional hosting location to a true global exchange point. For the cloud and enterprise market, this is a structural transition, not a headline project.

8. Rack Centre LGS2 Expansion, Lagos

Rack Centre’s LGS2 expansion stands out because it combines scale, sustainability and neutrality in a way few projects in the region can match. At 12MW, it expands the company’s footprint and positions the campus as one of the largest carrier-neutral sites in West Africa. 

In 2026, capacity alone will not be enough. Data centres that succeed will be those that can scale responsibly and connect efficiently, and this expansion is designed with that reality in mind.

The sustainability angle is not to be ignored. LGS2 builds on Rack Centre’s green credentials, with energy- and water-efficient design that has already set regional benchmarks. This is becoming more important as operators face high energy expenses and pressure from enterprise customers to meet environmental targets. 

The site’s ability to host dense workloads while maintaining efficiency gives it an edge as demand for compute continues to climb.

What makes LGS2 particularly relevant in 2026 is its ecosystem role. With access to all major Atlantic subsea cables and dozens of carriers, Rack Centre is not just adding space, it is strengthening Lagos’ place as an interconnection hub. 

With more data required to stay within national borders, facilities like this will anchor Nigeria’s digital sovereignty while supporting cloud growth at scale.

9. Africa Data Centres (Pan-African Expansion)

Africa Data Centres earns its place on this list not because of a single site, but because of its reach. In 2026, the story will move from isolated facilities to networks, and ADC is building one of the largest carrier-neutral footprints on the continent. 

Its expansion across Nigeria, Kenya, South Africa, Morocco and other key markets makes it a backbone in Africa’s digital economy.

Demand is the driver. Internet usage, digital payments, enterprise cloud adoption and content consumption are all accelerating, and latency is no longer acceptable. Hosting workloads closer to users is becoming essential. 

ADC’s strategy is a direct response to that pressure. Creating interconnected hubs across multiple countries, it enables cloud providers and enterprises to deploy regionally while staying compliant with local data rules.

In 2026, ADC’s importance will be measured by how seamlessly it links markets. Its facilities are designed to support hyperscale platforms, financial services and governments that need reliability and choice. 

Africa’s data centre capacity is expanding, and ADC’s pan-African model doesn’t just make it a landlord, but an enabler of cross-border digital trade and growth.

10. Project BRIDGE – Nigeria’s National Fibre Backbone

Project BRIDGE belongs on this list because data centres do not operate in isolation. Fibre is the silent dependency, and in 2026 this project will determine how far Nigeria’s cloud ambitions can really go. 

By planning to roll out 90,000 kilometres of open-access fibre, BRIDGE addresses the single biggest limitation facing large-scale digital infrastructure, and that is national connectivity.

What makes BRIDGE different is reach. While most data centre projects are clustered around Lagos, this initiative extends high-capacity connectivity to all 774 local government areas. 

That changes the economics of cloud services. This is the moment when data centres stop serving only coastal markets and begin supporting nationwide digital services in health, education, finance and public administration.

In practical terms, BRIDGE is the foundation beneath every hyperscale build planned for 2026 and beyond. Without reliable fibre backhaul, scale is theoretical. 

With it, cloud platforms can provide consistent performance across the country. For investors and operators, this project is the infrastructure that makes every other project on this list viable.

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MainOne, Rack Centre, or WIOCC: Which Network Can Help Nigerian Startups Scale? https://techeconomy.ng/mainone-rack-centre-wiocc-best-network-for-nigerian-startups/ https://techeconomy.ng/mainone-rack-centre-wiocc-best-network-for-nigerian-startups/#comments Thu, 09 Oct 2025 11:00:00 +0000 https://techeconomy.ng/?p=169024 Truly, startups are fast becoming the heartbeat of Africa’s innovation economy, but no matter how brilliant the ideas are, every founder eventually learns that a digital economy is only as strong as its infrastructure. Reliable connectivity, data centres, and secure cloud access are the true foundations of scale.

In this space, companies like MainOne (now Equinix), Rack Centre, and WIOCC through its Open Access Data Centres (OADC), are investing heavily to strengthen Nigeria’s digital backbone. 

But which of them is best positioned to ensure growth across the Nigerian startups sector?

MainOne (Equinix): The Global Reach & Certification Anchor

MainOne has leveraged its submarine cable system, fibre optic network, and its acquisition by Equinix to offer reach and certified reliability. Its data centre arm, MDXi, holds the Uptime Institute Tier III Constructed Facility certification (TCCF), among several other certifications (PCI-DSS, SAP Infrastructure Services, ISO 27001 & 9001). 

Its Network Connect and Cloud Connect services link local branches or clouds with global infrastructure. For example, by routing traffic via its submarine cable and leveraging Equinix Fabric, it offers predictable performance and connectivity from Lagos to key global hubs.

Power reliability, a common pain point in Nigeria, is one of MainOne’s standout strengths. Its Lagos data centre integrates multiple power redundancies, utility partnerships, and high-capacity generators to maintain near-continuous uptime. That’s essential for startups whose businesses can’t afford downtime.

Still, MainOne’s premium-grade services usually come at higher prices. For small or growing startups, that might make it more suitable at later stages of expansion rather than at the beginning.

So, MainOne offers scale, high certifications, international interconnect, and relatively lower risk from interruptions.

Rack Centre: The Nimble, Neutral & Efficiency-Driven Option

Rack Centre carved its reputation as Nigeria’s first carrier-neutral Tier III certified data centre. Unlike most competitors, it is not owned by any telecom or internet provider, which gives clients the flexibility to interconnect with over 70 different carriers and ISPs. That neutrality is one of its biggest competitive edges.

Its location in Oregun, Lagos, provides direct access to all the major undersea cables serving Nigeria, including WACS, MainOne, Glo-1, SAT-3 and ACE. The result is low latency, strong redundancy, and smooth interconnection between local networks.

Rack Centre’s new LGS2 facility represents a huge step forward. The 12MW hyperscale and AI-ready centre is designed for exceptional energy efficiency and sustainability, with advanced cooling systems and a lower Power Usage Effectiveness (PUE) ratio. This reduces operational costs and aligns with global sustainability standards, an important factor for modern tech companies.

Its approach appeals particularly to startups seeking flexibility, local performance, and freedom from vendor lock-ins. However, Rack Centre’s challenge is scale: it has a solid local presence but lacks the global integration that Equinix offers through MainOne.

One of its strongest propositions is neutrality: Rack Centre is not owned by a telco, ISP or cloud provider; it does not compete with its tenants; therefore, there is less risk of vendor lock-in or conflict. 

For startups, especially those scaling fast, Rack Centre tends to offer strong locality benefits: low latency within Nigeria, strong peering via IXPN, predictable interconnects, and usually more flexible arrangements for rack space or interconnection.

WIOCC / OADC: The Pan-African Connector, Big Capacity Incoming

WIOCC, via its Open Access Data Centres (OADC) arm, is scaling aggressively. Its strategy is open access, hyperscale capacity, and linking regional networks. 

OADC’s expansion plan is one of the biggest in the sector. The company has committed over $240 million to expand its Lagos data centre to 24 megawatts by 2027, starting with a 12MW first phase. The facility is designed to support cloud providers, hyperscale clients, and growing tech firms that need capacity and cross-border connectivity.

WIOCC also launched OAfabric, its cloud interconnection platform, which allows businesses to connect directly to international cloud services through a simplified interface. Combined with its wide fibre and submarine network, it aims to provide both affordability and regional reach.

That said, OADC’s infrastructure in Nigeria is still relatively new, with much of its full capacity under development. The scale and potential are enormous, but the market will need to see consistent delivery over time.

Its strength is scale (once the full capacity is live), strong peering potential across borders, and an open access model that benefits ISPs, cloud providers and telcos who need wholesale connectivity.

Comparing Strengths and Trade-offs

Each company brings something unique to Nigeria’s digital economy. MainOne is on top when it comes to global integration and enterprise-grade reliability, backed by Equinix’s global standards. For Rack Centre, it’s in neutrality, local performance, and energy efficiency, making it ideal for startups prioritising flexibility and cost control. WIOCC, meanwhile, is building a network that could redefine cross-border connectivity and scale for Africa’s data economy once fully realised.

In terms of reliability, both MainOne and Rack Centre already provide strong uptime backed by Tier III certifications. MainOne’s international connectivity gives it an advantage for startups with global vision. Rack Centre provides a more accessible, locally optimised alternative for startups that value independence and direct peering with multiple providers. WIOCC is the long-term investment, its pan-African fibre network and future 24MW capacity could make it the infrastructure giant to watch.

What I Think Startups Should Care About Most

If I were advising a startup today, I would tell them:

  • Get your foundation right: data sovereignty, uptime, and latency are not optional. Pick a provider with strong certifications and multiple power/fibre redundancy.
  • Think about the cost-to-scale: what looks affordable at 10 racks may be expensive at 100. Check how interconnect charges, cross-connects, and peering fees scale.
  • Be wary of lock-in. Providers that are carrier-neutral and open access give more flexibility to mix and match cloud, network, and hosting providers.
  • Monitor sustainability and total cost of ownership. Facilities that waste energy or have unreliable back-up power may cost more when things go wrong.

Who’s Best Positioned?

Each of these providers has a part. If I had to pick:

  • For startups already serving international customers or aiming to scale globally, MainOne/Equinix remains ahead because of its global interconnection, submarine cable reach, and certifications.
  • For startups focused on Nigeria or nearby countries and needing lower latency, predictable interconnect and flexible arrangements, Rack Centre looks like a strong option.
  • For companies needing wholesale capacity, cross-border reach, or anticipating rapid growth in cloud usage, WIOCC/OADC will likely pull ahead once their full capacity is available and stable.

In short: there is no single perfect choice. But the competition among these three is powerful for our ecosystem. Startups will benefit as they force better reliability, lower prices, and greater innovation. And I’m positive the fate of Nigerian startups looks brighter if we build this backbone well.

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OADC Launches OAfabric in Nigeria, DRC to Drive Africa’s $712bn Digital Economy, Cloud Growth https://techeconomy.ng/oadc-launches-oafabric-nigeria-drc-cloud-africa/ https://techeconomy.ng/oadc-launches-oafabric-nigeria-drc-cloud-africa/#comments Thu, 21 Aug 2025 17:12:10 +0000 https://techeconomy.ng/?p=165614 Africa’s digital economy is projected to reach $712 billion by 2050, up from $180 billion in 2025, however the continent still faces low internet penetration of 43%, compared to the global average of 68%

And for businesses, this gap means higher expenses, slower access to cloud services and limited ability to scale competitively.

Today, Open Access Data Centres (OADC), a WIOCC Group company, launched Open Access Fabric (OAfabric) in Nigeria (OADC Lagos) and the Democratic Republic of Congo, DRC (OADC Texaf – Kinshasa), to leapfrog these limitations and position Nigeria as Africa’s digital nerve centre.

With over 107 million internet users, Nigeria represents the continent’s largest digital market, but enterprises have long had challenges with high latency, expensive transit, and inconsistent local content access. 

The game-changing interconnection platform, OAfabric directly addresses these challenges, providing secure, low-latency connections, direct peering with global cloud providers, and integration with leading African IXPs, including IXPN in Nigeria and KINIX in the DRC.

Speaking at the launch, Dr Ayotunde Coker, chief executive officer of OADC, said “We designed OAfabric around the real challenges African businesses face. It is about solving problems – reducing the cost to compute, improving performance, unlocking access to cloud and content, and creating an environment where companies can scale with confidence while accelerating time to market.”

OAfabric is engineered to scale from 1Gbps to 100Gbps, supporting hybrid colocation architectures, AI workloads, and data-intensive applications. Traditionally, enterprises had to rely on the open internet, risking security breaches and inconsistent performance. Coker highlighted the platform’s protective advantage:

Without OAfabric, if you want to go to the cloud, you basically have to go to the open internet. All of us understand the disadvantages of pushing your content into the open internet. Companies now have to start building layers of security, all the years of security. 

“But with OAfabric, it is a secured connection, structural cable connection from here all the way into the cloud environment, irrespective of where you are. So you are guaranteed that literally, for someone to hack, he has to use a source and come back in. It’s extremely secure connectivity.”

Resilient, Reliable, and Rapid

The platform’s resilience was demonstrated last year during a subsea cable disruption. OADC restored 2 terabytes of connectivity within 48 hours, a project that would normally take three months, stressing the network’s ability to maintain Africa’s digital backbone under extreme pressure.

Latency is dramatically reduced, a huge factor for enterprises in fintech, cloud services, and AI. Coker explained:

We deliver a significant, well-reliable, low-latency connection. Latency between here and points in Europe, for instance, is significantly reduced. You can interconnect into Amsterdam, the UK, Marseille. We define with cloud providers exactly where we want to meet them and cross-connect very neatly, and it has a significant result on latency.”

Since 2018, OADC has expanded strategically across the continent. The Lagos data centre in Lekki currently operates at 2 megawatts, with plans to scale to 24 megawatts. 

Facilities in Kinshasa and four South African cities—Durban, Johannesburg, and Cape Town—serve as interconnection points for global subsea cables including Google Aquiano and 2Africa, creating a robust pan-African network.

Coker elaborated that “OAfabric gives us a more efficient way of delivering growth, not just in one direction, but with the capability to reverse the direction as we have more internet exchanges here, localising data. As we bring more actual cloud on-ramps into the country, we build the infrastructure for those hyperscale ramps to come here, and that’s what we’re doing.”

OAfabric aligns with Nigeria’s mega cloud policy, ensuring sensitive data remains within national borders while empowering local cloud providers to compete with international hyperscalers. It also opens the Nigerian market to foreign investment, enabling cloud edge zones and disaster recovery zones to be deployed with speed and confidence.

Head of Converged Open and Digital Infrastructure, OADC Africa, Obinna Adumike, explained the reach of OAfabric beyond Nigeria and DRC:

OAfabric is big, and it’s here. We have a very robust connectivity network, and the biggest advantage of that is the fact that WIOCC network can connect you to any country in the world, but most especially the closest continents that Africa impacts on; Africa, Europe, America, and then within the continent, East Africa, Southern Africa and all of that. These are the regions that most of our cloud users either connect to, send, or collect traffic.”

Simplifying Complexity for Enterprises

For businesses, OAfabric transforms previously complex digital operations into seamless, manageable workflows. Coker expatiated this:

Think of OAfabric as a box in a data centre. You connect to it, choose your pipe size—like deciding between a two-lane or four-lane highway—and your data flows efficiently to the cloud. The faster and more reliable the connection, the better the user experience.”

OAfabric is not just infrastructure; it represents a shift in what is possible for Africa’s digital economy,” added Dr Coker. “By removing barriers and enabling seamless, high-performance peering between key ecosystems, including local and global Internet Exchange Points (IXPs), content providers, cloud platforms and enterprises, it provides the frictionless interconnection needed to access digital services more efficiently.”

With OAfabric live in Nigeria and the DRC, OADC is creating a resilient, secure, and scalable pan-African digital ecosystem, empowering enterprises, accelerating innovation, and defining a new era of African digital sovereignty.

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Open Access Data Centres Lagos launches “Cut Costs, Not Quality” Campaign https://techeconomy.ng/open-access-data-centres-lagos-launches-cut-costs-not-quality-campaign/ https://techeconomy.ng/open-access-data-centres-lagos-launches-cut-costs-not-quality-campaign/#respond Sat, 03 May 2025 07:02:53 +0000 https://techeconomy.ng/?p=157953 Open Access Data Centres (OADC) Lagos has launched its new campaign, “Cut Costs, Not Quality” on Africa Hyperscalers platforms.

This initiative aims to provide businesses with an opportunity to reduce their data center costs without compromising on the quality of service.

OADC Lagos offers unmatched colocation services, delivering secure, reliable, and scalable solutions to meet the growing demands of today’s digital economy.

In a time when businesses are looking to optimize their operational expenses, Open Access Data Centres Lagos stands out by offering cost-effective services that maintain high standards of performance, uptime, and security.

The campaign invites discerning users to explore the range of services available at their state-of-the-art Lagos data center, which is designed to meet the needs of enterprises of all sizes.

Whether you’re a medium-sized business or a large corporation, OADC Lagos ensures that you can benefit from world-class infrastructure while saving on data management costs.

With their reliable and secure colocation solutions, businesses can focus on their core operations while trusting their data to a high-performance, scalable environment.

Take advantage of this opportunity to optimize your data storage needs without sacrificing quality.

Join Open Access Data Centres Lagos in cutting costs while maintaining the excellence your business deserves!

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Hyperscalers Convergence Africa 2024 Convenes Stakeholders to Shape the Future of Digital Infrastructure https://techeconomy.ng/hyperscalers-convergence-africa-2024-convenes-stakeholders-to-shape-the-future-of-digital-infrastructure/ https://techeconomy.ng/hyperscalers-convergence-africa-2024-convenes-stakeholders-to-shape-the-future-of-digital-infrastructure/#respond Fri, 30 Aug 2024 06:12:41 +0000 https://techeconomy.ng/?p=141726 Leading hyperscalers, digital infrastructure operators, investors, and regulators are confirmed to attend the Hyperscalers Convergence Africa conference, scheduled for September 5, 2024, in Lagos, Nigeria. 

This pivotal event aims to address the digital infrastructure gaps across the continent by uniting key stakeholders—including operators, regulators, investors, and service providers—to work toward a unified goal for Africa’s digital future.

The conference seeks to bring together Africa’s digital infrastructure community, fostering collaboration and innovation across sectors such as data centres, connectivity, cloud services, and more.

Confirmed attendees include senior and executive representatives from major organizations such as Meta Platforms, Cassava Technologies, Equinix, IHS Towers, Airtel, Apolo.io, Open Access Data Centres, MTN, Analyses Mason, Xalam Analytics, inq, Avanti Communications Plc., Digital Realty, Raxio Group, and various state governments.

The event will feature keynote presentations, panel sessions, and fireside chats on critical themes, including: “Satellite, Subsea, and Terrestrial: Africa’s Path to Seamless and Integrated Connectivity”; “Regulatory Frameworks for Fostering Digital Infrastructure Development in Africa”; “Data Center and Cloud in Africa: The Journey to 2500MW”; “Funding Africa’s Digital Infrastructure: What is the Right Mix?”, and “The Talent Gap: Developing Sustainable Digital Talent for Africa”, among others.

Speakers at the conference include Kazeem Oladepo, Chief Operating Officer (COO) at IHS Towers; Dr. Ayotunde Coker, Chief Executive Officer (CEO) of Open Access Data Centres; Wole Abu, CEO, Liquid Intelligent Technologies; Sade Dada, Public Policy Manager, Anglophone West Africa, Meta Platforms; Josephine Sarouk, Managing Director (MD), Bayobab; and Olatubosun Alake, Honorable Commissioner, Innovation, Science and Technology, Lagos State. Other speakers include Lanre Kolade, Chairman, ConnectedCompute; Ikechukwu Nnamani, CEO of Digital Realty Nigeria; Bill Kleyman, CEO of Apolo/Program Chair, AFCOM and Data Center World; Tony Izuagbe Emoekpere, President, Association of Telecommunications Companies of Nigeria; Dr. Krish Ranganath, Regional Executive- West Africa, Africa Data Centres; Wabo Majavu, Executive of Strategy and Business Operations at Africa Data Centre; Gbenga Adegbiji, CEO of Geniserve; Guy Zibi, Managing Partner of Xalam Analytics; Olusegun Maleghemi, CIO, Ouranos; Adewale Adeyemi, Head, Business Development; TeKnowledge; Adewole Adebisi, Head, Technical Operations, Raxio Group; Ifeanyi Akosionu, Managing Director, inq Digital; Dr. Hakeem Onasanya, Head, Startups (Lagos Innovates), LSETF; Olawale Owoeye, CEO, Cedarview Communications; Sameer Gupta, Principal, Analyses Mason; Femi Fajemirokun, Head, Information, Telecoms and Supervisory Control and Data Acquisition (SCADA), West African Power Pool, and Reuben Oshomah, Regional Director, West and Central Africa, Avanti Communications Plc.

Ahead of the event, Kazeem Oladepo, Chief Operating Officer at IHS Towers, expressed enthusiasm: “The Hyperscalers Convergence Africa conference promises to be a valuable platform to discuss opportunities and address pressing challenges in the deployment of digital infrastructure. I believe this gathering will set the stage for new initiatives, partnerships, and solutions that will advance Africa’s digital transformation.”

Lanre Kolade, Chairman of ConnectedCompute and former Group Chief Executive Officer of CSquared, emphasized the role of innovation through partnerships: “We can build digital infrastructure expansion and resilience by collaborating and creating synergies to close infrastructure gaps and empower our digital economy with a pan-African collaboration.”

As we grow Africa’s digital economy, the role of data centres becomes increasingly critical. At the Hyperscalers Convergence Africa conference, we have a unique opportunity to align our efforts and build out the infrastructure needed to support this growth.

“By aligning expanding carrier-neutral data centre capacity with robust pen access connectivity, we can unlock the potential for greater innovation and economic development and changing lives across the continent” commented Dr. Ayotunde Coker, Chief Executive Officer of Open Access Data Centres.

The Hyperscalers Convergence Africa conference represents a critical step in bridging the digital infrastructure gap across Africa.

By bringing together influential leaders and innovators, this event will foster collaboration and drive the necessary conversations and actions to shape Africa’s digital future.

The insights and partnerships forged at this conference will be instrumental in unlocking new opportunities for growth, innovation, and sustainability in Africa’s digital economy.

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Ayotunde Coker Joins Open Access Data Centres (OADC) as CEO https://techeconomy.ng/ayotunde-coker-joins-open-access-data-centres-oadc-as-ceo/ https://techeconomy.ng/ayotunde-coker-joins-open-access-data-centres-oadc-as-ceo/#respond Tue, 05 Jul 2022 07:53:30 +0000 https://techeconomy.ng/?p=78031 Dr Ayotunde Coker has been appointed the new chief executive officer (CEO) of Open Access Data Centres (OADC), a WIOCC company.

Effective immediately and based in Lagos, Nigeria, Dr Coker will lead OADC in its support and acceleration of Africa’s digital transformation by constructing and operating a pan-African network of Tier III certified data centre facilities as well as a unique core-to-edge open-access edge data centre ecosystem, made up of hyperscale, regional and OADC edge data centres, according to Capacity media, report.

“This is a dynamic period for businesses in Africa, with transformation driving rapid expansion of the continent’s digital infrastructure. I am excited to be joining OADC, which is set to play a huge role in establishing and growing the pan-African digital infrastructure and cloud ecosystem that will underpin this expansion – supporting cloud operators, content providers, the wholesale community and major enterprises in extending their reach and operations across the continent,” said Dr Coker.

“I am delighted to be leading OADC in transforming Africa’s digital capabilities, driving its deployment of a network and vibrant ecosystems of world-class, open-access digital infrastructure at strategic interconnection points throughout the continent. An opportunity for Africa to leapfrog the world.”

Dr Ayotunde Coker enters the role with 35 years of international experience across Europe, USA, Asia and Africa. For the last eight years he has served as CEO and managing director of Nigerian data centre provider, Rack Centre.

Prior to this, he worked as managing director and CEO of emerging markets payments, West Africa, at Rack Centre and before this as group CIO of Access Bank.

“I am absolutely delighted to welcome Tunde as CEO of Open Access Data Centres at this critical period in the company’s development,” said Chris Wood, CEO of WIOCC Group.

“Having secured $200m in funding at the end of 2021, we are now engaged in transforming Africa’s digital infrastructure with the most extensive deployment ever in Africa of open-access national, regional and edge data centres. Tunde’s depth and breadth of experience and leadership, together with his stature and contacts in the African data centre industry will, I’m sure, be instrumental in ensuring the company’s success.”

During his career he also held roles in UK including Ford, Cap Gemini, eMCSaatchi UK, Egg Bank, British Petroleum and the UK Ministry of Justice.

In addition, Dr Ayotunde Coker is the current president of the Africa Data Centres Association and served as chair of the UK Government Enterprise Architecture Board.

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