UniCloud Africa and Open Access Data Centres (OADC) have entered into a strategic partnership aimed at accelerating Africa’s digital transformation and strengthening data sovereignty across the continent.
The collaboration will see UniCloud Africa deploy its enterprise-grade sovereign cloud and artificial intelligence (AI) infrastructure within OADC’s carrier-neutral data centre facilities in key markets, including Nigeria, the Democratic Republic of Congo, and South Africa.
The move is designed to provide governments and enterprises with a secure, localised digital infrastructure that supports modernisation efforts while ensuring compliance with in-country data regulations.
Driving a Unified African Cloud Strategy
The partnership aligns with UniCloud Africa’s “One Cloud, One Africa” vision, which seeks to reduce reliance on offshore cloud providers and address challenges such as latency, regulatory risk, and data sovereignty.
By leveraging OADC’s Tier III-certified infrastructure, the platform will support high-performance, mission-critical workloads with guaranteed uptime and enhanced reliability.
According to UniCloud Africa, hosting infrastructure locally ensures that data generated within Africa remains within the continent, while also enabling faster access, improved security, and pricing models tailored to local markets.
Building a Multi-Market Digital Backbone
OADC’s regional footprint provides the scale required to support Africa’s major economic hubs:
- Nigeria: Supporting the rapid growth of fintech and enterprise ecosystems through its Lagos data centre campus
- DRC: Expanding access to local cloud capacity in Kinshasa to drive digital adoption
- South Africa: Enabling resilient infrastructure with geographically distributed systems for primary and disaster recovery operations
The companies say this multi-market approach will create a stronger digital backbone capable of supporting cross-border innovation and enterprise growth.
Unlocking AI and Advanced Computing Capabilities
Beyond core cloud services, the partnership will enable the rollout of UniCloud Africa’s GPU-as-a-Service (GPUaaS), giving organisations access to scalable computing power for AI, machine learning, and big data applications.
By eliminating data egress fees and enabling billing in local currencies, the initiative aims to remove cost barriers that have historically limited access to advanced cloud services on the continent.
Strengthening Africa’s Digital Independence
Industry stakeholders view the partnership as part of a broader shift toward digital sovereignty in Africa, where countries are increasingly prioritising control over data, infrastructure, and value creation.
With growing demand for secure, compliant, and high-performance digital infrastructure, the collaboration between UniCloud Africa and OADC is positioned to support the next phase of Africa’s digital economy—one defined by local capacity, regional integration, and innovation at scale.
Comments