Kenya has officially launched its Artificial Intelligence Strategy 2025–2030, a comprehensive roadmap aimed at transforming the country into Africa’s leading hub for AI innovation, research, and application. This milestone strategy seeks to harness artificial intelligence to drive sustainable development, economic growth, and social inclusion while embedding strong ethical safeguards.
According to the document, Kenya envisions becoming a continental leader by fostering a secure, inclusive, and innovative AI ecosystem. “Recognising the transformative potential of AI, the strategy also commits to safeguarding national interests by embedding robust data sovereignty, a cybersecurity framework, and ethical oversight in AI deployment,” the strategy states.
Developed through broad consultations involving government agencies, private sector leaders, academia, civil society, and international partners, the strategy is rooted in Kenya’s national values and diverse societal perspectives. Its release comes at a time when AI is increasingly viewed as a catalyst for economic advancement and societal transformation worldwide.
At its heart, the strategy focuses on three key pillars:
- AI Digital Infrastructure: Improving accessibility and affordability of AI systems and modernising national digital infrastructure.
- Data: Establishing a sustainable and robust data ecosystem essential for AI development.
- AI Research and Innovation: Promoting cutting-edge local AI model development through enhanced research, development, and commercialisation.
Supporting these pillars are four crucial enablers: governance, talent development, investment mobilisation, and the promotion of ethical, equitable, and inclusive AI practices.
The government emphasised collaboration as essential. Public institutions will drive regulatory guidance; the private sector will spearhead innovation and commercialisation; academia will advance research; civil society will advocate for inclusion; and local communities will ensure that AI solutions address real societal needs.
Highlighting Kenya’s ambitions, the Cabinet Secretary for Information, Communications, and the Digital Economy, Hon. William Kabogo Gitau, stated:
“The Government of Kenya remains committed to embracing and harnessing the power of AI for sustainable development, economic growth, and the well-being of our citizens. This strategy marks a significant milestone in positioning Kenya not only as a leader in AI innovation but also as a champion of equitable technology use.”
Key priorities under the strategy include deploying AI in critical sectors such as agriculture, healthcare, education, security, and public service delivery. The plan also stresses inclusivity, aiming to ensure that underserved communities are not left behind in the AI revolution.
Notably, Kenya is taking a phased approach to implementation, starting with foundational investments in policy, infrastructure, and skills development, followed by establishing national AI hubs, executing pilot projects, and setting up a robust monitoring and evaluation framework.
As the document concludes, it issues a call to action:
“Kenya seeks to lead in driving equitable and sustainable AI adoption while ensuring that the benefits of this transformative technology reach all its citizens. This strategy is a call to action for stakeholders to collaborate in realising this vision.”
The strategy’s development was supported by key international partners, including the German Federal Ministry of Economic Cooperation and Development (BMZ), the European Union, Canada’s International Development Research Centre (IDRC), and the UK’s Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office (FCDO).
With the launch of this ambitious strategy, Kenya has positioned itself firmly on the map as a future leader in responsible and innovative AI on the African continent.













