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December 17, 2025
Wingu News
Governments and the private sector in East Africa alike are investing heavily in connectivity, cloud services, e-commerce, fintech and digital public services. This digital transformation is driving strong demand for resilient and scalable data centre infrastructure, integral to business continuity and competitive performance in markets such as Kenya, Uganda, Tanzania, Rwanda and Ethiopia.
Across the broader continent, the Africa data centre market is estimated at USD 1.94 billion in 2025 and projected to nearly double to USD 3.85 billion by 2030, expanding at a compound annual growth rate of around 14.7 % as enterprises, cloud providers and governments accelerate digital transformation and local hosting capacity. IT load capacity across Africa is also expected to grow rapidly over this period, reflecting rising demand for colocation, cloud on-ramps and sovereign data hosting.1
These trends underscore the increasing importance of selecting the right data centre provider as a sub-optimal choice can result in poor performance, compliance failures, high costs and even brand or economic risk. The sections that follow explore the essential issues organisations should consider when choosing a data centre partner in East Africa.
Certification, Reliability and Uptime
One of the first considerations when evaluating data centre providers is the design standard and reliability that facilities can legitimately demonstrate. Globally, the Uptime Institute’s Tier classification system (Tier I to IV) is widely used to distinguish reliability, redundancy and uptime guarantees. For mission-critical workloads or enterprise systems, Tier III or above is typically advised, as these facilities are designed to provide concurrent maintainability and minimise planned or unplanned downtime.
In East Africa, many facilities are now moving toward Tier III design standards as demand grows from financial institutions, government agencies and cloud service providers. Reputable providers will hold independent certifications and offer Service Level Agreements (SLAs) with measurable uptime commitments. Because grid electricity in parts of the region can be unstable, robust redundancy in power and cooling infrastructure is far from optional, it is crucial to meeting contractual availability targets.
Power Infrastructure and Energy Resilience
Power reliability and energy cost are important considerations in East Africa. Many national grids are stretched by increasing demand, and utility supply can be disrupted by rolling outages or maintenance events. Against this backdrop, modern data centres in the region typically employ redundant power configurations, such as N+1 or 2N setups, alongside UPS systems and diesel generators, to ensure operations continue during disruptions. Another key metric is Power Usage Effectiveness (PUE), which indicates energy efficiency; a lower PUE corresponds to a more efficient facility.
The region is also embracing renewable energy solutions. Kenya, for example, benefits from significant renewable generation capacity, including geothermal and hydroelectric sources, that can reduce the carbon footprint and operating costs of data centres. Ethiopia and Tanzania have also made substantial investments in hydroelectric schemes, including large dams, resulting in significant green and sustainable generation capacity. Some new builds are designed to meet high standards of energy efficiency and support sustainability goals, reflecting both environmental responsibility and operational pragmatism.
The density of power infrastructure and the availability of reliable electricity will influence not only ongoing costs but also the economic advantage of on-premises versus collocated or cloud-linked services.
Connectivity, Carrier Neutrality and Network Peering
Robust network connectivity is vital for low-latency, high-performance digital services. East Africa benefits from multiple subsea cable systems, including SEACOM, EASSy, 2Africa, SEA-ME-WE 5 and Blue-Raman, which feed inland fibre networks connecting key hubs such as Nairobi, Kampala, Dar es Salaam and Addis Ababa, ensuring that data flows can be sustained even during individual route failures.
When assessing providers, organisations should look for carrier-neutral facilities that offer multiple independent network pathways and peering options. Carrier neutrality provides users with choice and the ability to access connectivity from whichever service provider they choose, resulting in better quality of service, pricing and overall optimal outcomes tailored to each individual customer's preferences and requirements. This flexibility enhances resilience and improves performance for latency-sensitive workloads, which is particularly relevant for applications like real-time financial transactions, video streaming or hybrid cloud deployments. Access to local Internet Exchange Points (IXPs), such as KIXP in Kenya, TIX in Tanzania and ADDIX in Ethiopia can significantly reduce latency and data transfer costs by enabling local traffic exchange.
Enterprises should also consider whether a provider can facilitate direct cloud connectivity to both global public cloud platforms such as Amazon Web Services (AWS), Microsoft Azure or Google Cloud, as well as local private cloud options. Local private cloud access is increasingly in demand for compliance, cost and availability factors, and can only be hosted and made available from within data centres located in each market. These direct interconnections reduce the dependency on the public internet and improve both performance and security.
Physical and Cybersecurity Measures
Both physical and digital security are paramount in data centre selection, particularly as East African economies embrace digital payments, mobile banking and e-government services. Facilities should be constructed with well-defined security perimeters, including controlled access points, CCTV surveillance, biometric entry systems and security guards to monitor on-site activity.
On the cybersecurity front, providers should offer firewalls, distributed denial-of-service (DDoS) protection, intrusion detection systems and continuous monitoring. Certifications such as ISO 27001 and adherence to frameworks like SOC 2 or PCI DSS signal that a provider has instituted mature information security policies and operational processes.
Given that data centres often handle sensitive customer and business data, robust security is not just about compliance, it is about trust. Any breach or service interruption can have far-reaching consequences, including financial loss, regulatory penalties and reputational damage.
Scalability and Service Flexibility
Digital adoption in East Africa is accelerating, requiring data centres that can accommodate growth in rack space, power requirements, and cloud connectivity. As revenue in the region’s data centre market is forecast to grow steadily through 2030, organisations needing digital services will want partners capable of scaling with demand.
Providers offering colocation, private cloud, public cloud integration and managed services enable organisations to scale infrastructure without disruptive migrations. Scalability also means the ability to support emerging technologies and workloads, such as artificial intelligence (AI), machine learning and edge computing, which require high-density compute and low-latency networking.
Data Sovereignty and Local Compliance
Data sovereignty is a growing concern globally, and East Africa is no exception. Tanzania’s “Data Protection and Privacy Act” and Ethiopia’s emerging data privacy regulations impose strict controls on the collection, storage, and transfer of personal and sensitive information. For banks, telecommunications operators, and government institutions, compliance with these regulations is crucial to avoid legal penalties and reputational risk.
Providers who can guarantee that data remains within national borders or ensure compliant cross-border transfers within the East African Community (EAC) offer significant value, helping organisations maintain operational efficiency while adhering to legal requirements. Ensuring that sensitive data is handled according to local laws is increasingly important as digital services expand in the region.
Support, SLAs, and Technical Expertise
Operational support is a differentiator in a region where skilled data centre engineers and technicians can be in short supply. Providers should offer 24/7 on-site support, with clear SLAs covering response times, incident management, escalation paths and remedies for service failures. SLAs should be transparent, measurable and tailored to the organisation’s use case.
Local expertise is also invaluable. Understanding regional infrastructure nuances, such as grid reliability patterns, regulatory enforcement practices or customary procurement processes, helps providers deliver better service and anticipate issues before they impact operations.
Geographical Risks and Accessibility
The physical location of a data centre affects everything from latency to disaster resilience. Proximity to major population and economic centres such as Nairobi, Kampala, Dar es Salaam or Addis Ababa, can enhance performance for local users, reduce network costs and make it easier for internal IT teams to visit the facility for maintenance or audits.
However, decision-makers should also consider environmental risks, including flood zones, seismic activity and extreme weather patterns, as well as local infrastructure like road access and transport reliability. Cooling is another practical consideration: data centres in hotter climates may incur higher costs if not designed with efficient thermal management systems.
Total Cost of Ownership
Price is always an important factor, but it should not overshadow value. Total Cost of Ownership (TCO) includes not just rack space, power and bandwidth, but also set-up fees, cross-connect costs, remote hands support and any contractual exit fees. Organisations should look beyond headline prices to assess lifetime costs and potential savings from improved performance or reduced risk exposure.
Often, investing in a reliable, well-connected and secure regional data centre can yield better value than opting for cheaper but distant offshore alternatives that may incur higher latency, poorer compliance and hidden operational costs.
Conclusion
Choosing the right data centre provider in East Africa requires a holistic evaluation of technical capabilities, operational integrity, regulatory alignment and long-term growth potential. With the region’s data centre market poised for ongoing expansion, backed by rising digital adoption, international investment and expanding connectivity infrastructure, organisations stand to benefit from well-informed decisions that align performance, security and strategic goals.
By prioritising certified reliability, resilient power, robust connectivity, strong security, regulatory compliance and scalable services, businesses can secure a partner capable of supporting their digital ambitions in a region that is increasingly central to Africa’s broader economic transformation.
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