News Investigators/ MTN Nigeria on Tuesday in Abuja called on the public and private sectors to collaborate with it to address the challenges and opportunities inherent in Artificial Intelligence (AI) development in the country.
The Chief Executive Officer the company, Karl Toriola, said this in a paper entitled “Toward a United AI Strategy for Africa” which he presented during a plenary session at the 2025 Gulf Information Technology Exhibition (GITEX).
The theme of the on-going four-day event is: “Building Continental Digital Foundations for Equitable AI Development”.
The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that while the summit would hold in Abuja between Sept. 1, and Sept. 2, exhibition would hold in Lagos from Sept. 3 to Sept. 4
Mr Toriola said that Nigeria needed to invest in data infrastructure, power supply, and skills development to support AI growth in the country.
He said the country required patience and capacity to build and implement AI solutions to maximise its potential.
“I would love to see a headline that says, Nigeria has articulated a clear strategy on how to advance artificial intelligence.
“I would like to read that it has harnessed the resources, both private and public, and is executing them with discipline and labour,” he said.
Toriola said that Nigeria had faced a significant gap in data centre capacity, with an estimated 90-megawatt gap.
The CEO identified the country’s poor power supply as a major challenge, adding that AI data centres required massive amounts of energy, equivalent to one nuclear power plant per data centre.
He advised that the country should build sovereign data ecosystems, adding that it will require computing infrastructure collectively.
“There is about a 90-megawatt gap in terms of data centre capacity today. It is estimated that data consumption from AI will be 16-fold of what we are consuming today.
“What we, as a nation, are going to try to do is to build sovereign data ecosystems, which requires computing infrastructure collectively. We do have some connectivity, but it is a long way to go.
“AI data centre that are being built today are of the scale that they need one nuclear power plant per data center. And that is where we have a huge gap,” he said.
According to him, MTN will continue to invest, execute and deliver solutions to consumers, Small, Medium Enterprises (SMEs) and large enterprises that enable them to tap into AI opportunities.
NAN reports that industry players across the continent and beyond, academia, governments, companies, among other entities are participating in the programme.
NAN