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Mudavadi: Kenya to lead ethical, inclusive and innovation-driven AI adoption

Mudavadi represented Kenya at the just-concluded Global AI Summit 2025 in Kigali, Rwanda.

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by PERPETUA ETYANG

Realtime06 April 2025 - 15:37
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In Summary


  • Mudavadi noted that Kenya is setting out a government-led vision for ethical, inclusive, and innovation-driven AI adoption.
  • This, he said, is backed by the recently released first National Artificial Intelligence Strategy (2025–2030), by the Ministry of Information, Communications and the Digital Economy.

Prime Cabinet Secretary Musalia Mudavadi during a summit in Rwanda on April 6, 2025/ OPCS

Kenya is positioning itself to be Africa’s leading artificial intelligence (AI) hub for model innovation, driving sustainable development, economic growth and social inclusion, Prime Cabinet Secretary Musalia Mudavadi has said.

Mudavadi said Kenya strives to take the lead in AI research and application, keeping in mind the transformative potential of AI moving into the future.

Mudavadi, who represented Kenya at the just-concluded Global AI Summit 2025 in Kigali, Rwanda, affirmed that Kenya is also looking at ensuring the AI ecosystem is secure.

“In Kenya, there's already a very serious conversation that is taking place, and our focus is to implement a strategy that provides a comprehensive framework to guide Kenya in harnessing the transformative power of AI, ensuring its deployment benefits all sectors of society while adhering to ethical principles and inclusivity,” Mudavadi said.

“As a continent, we need to not allow ourselves to be driven by fear. Fear should not drive us out of town on this agenda of artificial intelligence.”

Mudavadi noted that Kenya is setting out a government-led vision for ethical, inclusive, and innovation-driven AI adoption that will shape Kenya’s future and be a strategic landmark on the continent.

This, he said, is backed by the recently released first National Artificial Intelligence Strategy (2025–2030), by the Ministry of Information, Communications and the Digital Economy.

He explained that at the core of this strategy is Kenya’s aspiration to adopt AI technologies and lead in AI model innovation and commercialization, creating solutions tailored to its unique needs and those of the African continent.

“Investment in education becomes very critical considering our budgetary allocation of up to Sh600 billion on education. We need to ensure that a component of our budget is driven to the right programs tailored towards tooling the youth towards AI-driven technologies,” Mudavadi added.

“Kenya’s programs that focus on Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics will be re-defined and strengthened because we have a massive young techno-savvy population that need to be equipped at the onset.

Mudavadi said healthcare, agriculture, financial services and public administration are named as strategic AI priorities for Kenya, with health tech and smart agriculture being some of the examples that Kenya is investing heavily in to ensure its AI envisioned strategy takes off at a rapid speed.

The expanded digital infrastructure, data centers, and cloud resources, as well as national research hubs, are among other resources that Kenya is building its AI capacity around with key legislations being drafted to guide this space.

“What Kenya is also doing is to have sweeteners to attract the youth in the fields like agriculture, and that is where AI comes in to ensure that the youth take interest in sectors that initially largely relied on traditional labour-intensive practices," he noted.

In Kigali, the Prime Cabinet Secretary outlined Kenya’s interventions in ensuring that it gains enough computing infrastructure to power its AI, given that it is one of Africa’s largest producers of renewable energy and also ranked amongst the top five of Africa’s most AI-ready nations as per the Oxford Insights’ 2022 report.

He told the summit that Kenya is heavily investing in building data centres to address the shortage of computing infrastructures keeping in mind that energy is becoming a critical infrastructure to power the data centres in future.

Mudavadi noted that Kenya’s grid is about 93 per cent green energy focused on renewable and green energy, saying the key component of investing in energy as a continent will help steadily drive the AI agenda.

“We need to also look broadly on how we invest in the energy sector as a continent. Because we have made it quite expensive, in my view, for people to invest in the energy sector on the continent. We need to look at this component critically and what would be the incentives we can we give so that those who want to come and invest in particularly solar, wind and geothermal energy do it with ease.”

"We also need to work closely, coordinate as a continent, and make sure that we direct resources to upgrade our capacity in artificial intelligence and in technology as a whole. Policy makers on the continent need to look at specific areas of interest, keeping in mind that artificial intelligence is the heart of the fourth industrial revolution, reshaping economies, redefining power, and rewriting the rules of progress.”

The summit acknowledged that Africa’s future on AI should be built by design and not by default.

“As governments, we don’t have enough resources to drive this AI and other technologies. As a continent we must loosen up and ensure that we bring the private sector on board and collaborate with them and allow them to thrive in nearly all sectors.”

The PCS said the African Union has already adopted a number of policy frameworks that will enable the continent to develop AI strategies with an establishment of a 5-year plan, phased between 2025 -2026 and 2028-2030.

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