The philanthropic arm of Google.org has made a fresh investment to supercharge artificial intelligence (AI) skills development in Africa. In its latest move, the organisation is backing African Technology Forum (ATF) with funds aimed at boosting AI talent across the continent. The investment spotlights ATF’s central role in shaping Africa’s digital future.
Under the renewed commitment, Google.org is providing ₦3 billion (about US $2.1 million) to support a two-pillar initiative focused on advanced AI talent and stronger digital safety for communities across Nigeria.
The funding will be channelled through five expert organisations, including the ATF, FATE Foundation (together with the African Institute for Mathematical Sciences– AIMS), JA Africa, and CyberSafe Foundation.
One of the key aims is to embed an advanced AI curriculum into Nigerian universities through the FATE Foundation and AIMS partnership, helping students and lecturers build deeper AI expertise.
Meanwhile, ATF will lead an innovation challenge, offering a hands-on path for developers: from learning AI fundamentals to building real-world AI products and solutions. This will help turn theoretical knowledge into practical, usable tools and services.
On the digital safety side, JA Africa will scale the “Be Internet Awesome” programme to teach online safety and good digital habits to youths, parents, and educators. And the CyberSafe Foundation will strengthen cybersecurity for public institutions, a move meant to ensure that as digital adoption grows, security and trust grow with it.
This isn’t Google’s first investment in African AI. The funding builds on earlier initiatives such as the 2023 “Skills Sprint” programme implemented with Mind the Gap, which trained thousands in AI and tech skills.
According to Google’s West Africa director, this commitment supports the country’s ambitious national goals. For instance, Nigeria’s National AI Strategy aims to create one million digital jobs and the new funding directly backs that target.
Experts say Nigeria could unlock as much as US $15 billion in economic value from AI by 2030 if it builds the right infrastructure, including trained personnel and secure digital platforms.
In short, Google.org’s investment, which is channelled through ATF and others is not just about teaching people new skills. It’s about building a foundation for a future where Nigerians can lead, create, innovate, and contribute meaningfully to a thriving AI-powered economy.
By funding AI education and infrastructure, Google.org helps build a skilled workforce ready for digital industries, a key driver for economic growth. If Nigeria capitalises on this by integrating AI across sectors, it could generate billions in value by 2030, reduce unemployment, and strengthen competitiveness in the global digital economy.




