IT in Manufacturing


Revealing Africa’s great potential

July 2026 IT in Manufacturing


Canninah Dladla, cluster president for sub-Saharan Africa at Schneider Electric.

In 2026, Africa stands at a significant moment in its development journey. Governments, business and communities are coming together navigating numerous challenges, but also establishing the foundation for tremendous growth.

An important part of the continent’s journey is understanding that Africa will not be built on external investment or imported solutions, but on an inward strength that sees it investing in people, regional markets and industries while driving long-term prosperity.

What struck me most at the recent Africa CEO Forum in Kigali, Rwanda, is the consensus that the continent’s growth will be unlocked not by importing solutions, but by building capacity from within. Our role as leaders is to ensure that electrification, digitalisation and industrial localisation are grounded in African realities. Findings by the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development and the African Union Africa Development Dynamics Overview 2025 suggest that strategic investments in infrastructure, industrialisation and intra-African trade could accelerate GDP growth over the next two decades while also reducing exposure to global economic shocks.

Africa’s youth dividend

The continent’s greatest strength is its people and particularly its youth. With the youngest population in the world, more than 60% of all Africans are under the age of 25, the demographic advantage is unquestionable. It has the potential to become one of the most significant economic growth drivers globally, but only if supported by deliberate investment in education, technical skills, entrepreneurship and digital inclusion.

Technology hubs in countries such as Nigeria, Kenya, Rwanda and South Africa are creating innovative solutions tailored to African realities, from digital payments and agri-tech platforms to renewable energy systems and healthcare solutions, showing that when investment is made, local talent flourishes.

Moving beyond commodity dependence

Africa’s long-term resilience will depend on diversifying beyond traditional commodity-based economies. For decades, many African countries have relied heavily on exporting raw materials while importing finished products, leaving economies vulnerable to fluctuating global commodity prices and external market instability.

Several countries are moving away from this model. Morocco has developed a globally competitive automotive manufacturing sector, while Ethiopia has invested in industrial parks designed to stimulate local manufacturing and supply chains. Also, Africa’s clean energy investment has nearly tripled in recent years, rising from $17 billion in 2019 to close to $40 billion in 2024, while agribusiness already contributes 23% of sub-Saharan Africa’s GDP and is projected to reach $1 trillion by 2030.

Infrastructure is the foundation for growth

Energy and infrastructure will play a non-negotiable role in enabling Africa’s transformation. Without reliable, efficient and sustainable infrastructure, industrialisation and digital growth cannot scale. Access to electricity, modernising grids, improving transport systems and investing in decentralised energy solutions will be key to unlocking economic participation for millions of Africans. According to the African Union, Africa will require substantial annual infrastructure investment to meet its productive transformation needs and support long-term economic resilience.

African-led innovation

The power of local knowledge and innovation can never be underestimated. Some of the most innovative solutions on the African continent are emerging from within local communities. Community-led microgrids, climate-smart agricultural initiatives and locally developed clean energy projects are proving that African-led innovation can address both developmental and environmental challenges simultaneously.

In rural Tanzania, community-led solar microgrids have transformed villages by providing reliable electricity for schools, clinics and small businesses while reducing reliance on diesel generators. Farmers in Kenya are also adopting climate-smart practices such as solar-powered irrigation and digital platforms that use AI to extend credit and advice to smallholders. These solutions are often more adaptable and sustainable because they are designed by people who understand the realities of their own communities.

The power of regional integration

Regional collaboration will also be essential to Africa’s future growth story. No single African country can fully unlock its economic potential in isolation. This is where the African Continental Free Trade Area/ AfCFTA becomes particularly significant. As the world’s largest free trade area by participating countries, AfCFTA has the potential to reshape the continent’s economic landscape by reducing trade barriers, strengthening regional supply chains and boosting intra-African trade.

AfCFTA also represents the spirit of cooperation on the continent that ensures its regions and people grow from within, in tandem with one another. Africa’s story of great potential has begun, and it’s an exciting journey.


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