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Kenyan tech group unveils cloud AI lab to boost jobs and innovation

 Siscom staff, partners and their community of developers at one per cent Cloud and AI Lab during a past event in Nairobi. Photo/ Courtesy

A coalition of leading Kenyan technology organizations has joined forces to launch the “one per cent Cloud and AI Lab,” a co-creation space aimed at nurturing the continent’s next generation of innovators in cloud computing and artificial intelligence (AI).

 The Lab, announced recently through a partnership that includes Siscom, MindIntelligence, AI Kenya, Nafasi, Lyrid.io, Tech Trendz, and Empserve, is set to provide a collaborative platform where developers, AI scientists, and entrepreneurs can build, test, and launch disruptive solutions tailored for African markets.

In a press statement the coalition stated its ambitious mission to generate one million direct digital jobs by 2030, and millions more indirectly, the initiative seeks to position Africa as a global hub for innovation while directly addressing the continent’s employment and skills gaps.

At the heart of the Lab’s strategy is a focus on innovations aligned with the United Nations’ Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) that address critical sectors such as poverty alleviation, agriculture, healthcare, education, and financial inclusion.

For instance, with over 33per cent of Kenyans living below the national poverty line, Lab partners seek to support AI-driven projects that open economic opportunities and strengthen small businesses.

Agriculture, which employs more than 40 per cent of Kenyans, is another core focus, with AI-enabled market intelligence, crop and animal health diagnostics, and farmer knowledge hubs intended to boost yields and increase profitability.

Additionally, the Lab promotes AI applications in fintech—covering onboarding, fraud detection, and robo-advisory services—as well as innovations for manufacturing, aviation, digital commerce, and informal retail sectors.

A distinctive feature of the initiative is its model of democratizing digital infrastructure.

Many Kenyan startups face prohibitive costs from major cloud providers, which threatens their survival. Siscom, an African-owned infrastructure company, offers locally hosted high-performance computing clusters and GPU nodes with flexible, pay-as-you-go pricing in local currency, tuned to the realities of African cash flows.

 “The 1per cent Cloud and AI Lab is more than a workspace, it’s a Launchpad for the builders who will solve Africa’s greatest challenges.” Derrick Gakuu, Chief Information Officer at Siscom, highlighted the Lab’s broader purpose.

Derrick said they are combining cloud accessibility, AI innovation, and a co-creation culture to ensure no brilliant idea dies because of lack of infrastructure or access.

The Lab also encourages collaboration between startups and large corporates, creating an open innovation environment for co-creation.

 “We have a brilliant PaaS platform live in the USA and East Asia,” said Hndoyo Sutanto, CEO of Lyrid. “Partnering with Siscom makes this Lab the perfect place for us to plug and play, giving Kenyan developers tools to build scalable, enterprise-grade solutions.”

The initiative has strong backing from local AI communities as well. Alfred Ongere, founder of AI Kenya, said the country stands at the forefront of AI innovation in the region.

 “Kenya could lead the AI race in the region. We see a need for companies to deploy their own large language models for data privacy and productivity,” Ongere said. “Hosting these on locally deployed Siscom clusters guarantees data sovereignty and privacy.”

Similarly, grassroots engagement is a key priority. Martin Irungu, director at Empserve Kenya, underlined the importance of upskilling and inclusion, especially among women graduates.

The initiative also addresses a persistent gap between academic training and practical workplace skills.

 “Every year, junior developers graduate from institutions in Kenya with no solid workplace for them to learn,” said Dorcas Kanini of Siscom. “With the Siscom Developer Campus and the one per cent Cloud & AI Lab, we see them gain critical exposure to real-world collaboration and problem-solving.”

The coalition behind the Lab comprising technology insiders, innovation enablers, media platforms, and employment facilitators is betting that this holistic approach will help Kenya and Africa leapfrog into a sustainable digital future.

 By enabling cost-effective cloud access, fostering local AI expertise, and supporting inclusive entrepreneurship, the Lab aims to unlock a wave of digital innovation that addresses real societal needs.

As the digital ecosystem accelerates, Kenya’s one per cent Cloud and AI Lab hopes to be a beacon for African-made technology solutions built on local infrastructure, data sovereignty, and community collaboration

Its success could reshape the continent’s development trajectory and position Kenya as a leader in the AI and cloud revolution.

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