New subsea cable among $1bn Google investment in Africa

Undersea Cable
(Image credit: Shuterstock / Christoph Burgstedt)

At its first ever Google for Africa event, Google has announced that it will invest $1bn in the continent in an effort to support digital transformation across Africa.

Google and Alphabet CEO Sundar Pichai led the virtual event in which the search giant laid out its plans to land a subsea cable into the continent to provide faster internet speeds, offer low-interest loans for small businesses, invest into African startups and more.

One of the reasons behind Google's investment is that it wants to help foster innovation in Africa that will then spread throughout the world. For instance, African users were among the first to access the internet through a phone rather than through a computer and mobile money was ubiquitous in Kenya before being adopted by the rest of the world according to a new blog post from Pichai. Google expects this momentum to increase as 300m people go online in Africa over the next five years.

Picahi reflected on the company's progress in Africa so far and explained that there is still more work to be done during his speech at Google for Africa, saying:

“We’ve made huge strides together over the past decade — but there’s more work to do to make the internet accessible, affordable and useful for every African. Today I’m excited to reaffirm our commitment to the continent through an investment of $1 billion over five years to support Africa’s digital transformation, to cover a range of initiatives from improved connectivity to investment in startups.”

Equiano subsea cable

As part of its efforts in Africa, Google will invest in projects that will be implemented in countries across the continent including Nigeria, Kenya, Uganda and Ghana.

The new Equiano subsea cable will connect Africa to Europe by cutting across South Africa, Namibia, Nigeria and St Helena. According to managing director for Google in Africa Nitin Gajria, this new cable will provide approximately 20 times more network capacity than the last cable built to serve Africa.

At the same time though, Equiano will lead to a 21 percent reduction in internet prices while increasing speed in Nigeria and almost tripling speeds in South Africa. This new subsea cable is also projected to create around 1.7m jobs in Nigeria and South Africa by 2025.

We'll likely hear more about Google's new Equiano subsea cable and how it has increased internet speeds in Africa once it has been deployed.

Via TechCrunch

TOPICS
Anthony Spadafora

After working with the TechRadar Pro team for the last several years, Anthony is now the security and networking editor at Tom’s Guide where he covers everything from data breaches and ransomware gangs to the best way to cover your whole home or business with Wi-Fi. When not writing, you can find him tinkering with PCs and game consoles, managing cables and upgrading his smart home. 

Read more
Meta Project Waterworth
Meta reveals huge new 50,000km subsea cable project
Google DeepMind panel discussion
“More sovereignty and protection” - Google goes all-in on UK AI with data residency, upskilling projects, and startup investments
Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg
Forget mega yachts, AI data centers are quickly becoming the next battleground for billionaires as Zuckerberg pledges $65 billion CAPEX spend in 2025
Microsoft
Microsoft reveals surprise plan to spend $80bn on AI data centers
Microsoft's $3bn investment in India
Microsoft reveals billion-dollar cloud and AI investment plan in India
AWS data center
Amazon is spending billions on expanding its data centers in Georgia
Latest in Pro
Microsoft
"Another pair of eyes" - Microsoft launches all-new Security Copilot Agents to give security teams the upper hand
Lock on Laptop Screen
Medusa ransomware is able to disable anti-malware tools, so be on your guard
AI quantization
What is AI quantization?
US flags
US government IT contracts set to be centralized in new Trump order
An abstract image of digital security.
Fake file converters are stealing info, pushing ransomware, FBI warns
Google Gemini AI
Gmail is adding a new Gemini AI tool to help smarten up your work emails
Latest in News
Disney Plus logo with popcorn
You can finally tell Disney+ to stop bugging you about that terrible Marvel show you regret starting
Girl wearing Meta Quest 3 headset interacting with a jungle playset
Latest Meta Quest 3 software beta teases a major design overhaul and VR screen sharing – and I need these updates now
Philips Hue
Philips Hue might be working on a video doorbell, and according to a new report, we just got our first look at it
Microsoft
"Another pair of eyes" - Microsoft launches all-new Security Copilot Agents to give security teams the upper hand
Hatch Restore 3 in Putty
You can finally start your day with The Office theme song, and I couldn't be more excited
Cassian Andor looking nervously over his shoulder in Andor season 2
New Andor season 2 trailer has got Star Wars fans asking the same question – and it includes an ominous call back to Rogue One's official teaser