The recently concluded AI Everything Kenya x GITEX Kenya convened over 15,000 delegates in Nairobi, affirming that what Kenya and Africa are building in Artificial Intelligence and digital innovation is no longer a future ambition, but a present reality.
With sustained investments in digital infrastructure, policy innovation, and technology ecosystems, Nairobi continues to solidify its position as one of Africa’s leading technology and innovation hubs.
The summit underscored a clear imperative: the transition from theory to practice. For East Africa, this means integrating AI into the bedrock of national services, healthcare, energy grids, and financial services, while fostering a research and entrepreneurship ecosystem that creates, rather than just imports, technology.
That transition from theory to practice is already taking shape at the national level. Last year, Kenya launched a five-year national artificial intelligence strategy, requiring Sh152 billion to position the country as Africa’s leading hub for AI research, innovation and deployment.
Additionally, Kenya’s Artificial Intelligence Bill, 2026, currently before the Senate, is a timely and necessary recognition that artificial intelligence now shapes public administration, the economy, health, education, and democratic processes in Kenya.
Partnerships that Support Legislation
But legislation alone cannot build a digital powerhouse. It needs a partner that has already walked the path—and the United Arab Emirates has done exactly that. At the G20 Summit held last year, the UAE Government announced the $1 billion AI For Development Initiative, which aims to bolster economic and social development across Africa by developing digital infrastructure, enhancing government services and improving productivity.
“The UAE’s partnerships across Africa are well established, spanning more than 50 countries in areas such as sustainable energy, food security, infrastructure, education, digital transformation, artificial intelligence, and healthcare”, says Saeed bin Mubarak Al Hajeri, the UAE Minister of State at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs.
The convergence of smart cities and digital trade represents the single most promising frontier in Kenya-UAE cooperation. The UAE’s experience building Dubai Internet City—a purpose-built ecosystem that transformed a desert into a global technology hub—offers a proven blueprint for Kenya’s long-envisioned Konza Technopolis.
Regional Trade and Technology Hub
As Kenya positions itself as East Africa’s regional trade and technology hub, Emirati investment in cloud capacity and Arabic- and Swahili-optimized Large Language Models could unlock transformative growth in cross-border e-commerce and fintech. AI-powered logistics, automated trade documentation, and credit-scoring algorithms for informal traders would lower barriers for millions of small businesses across the region.
In this vision, smart cities supply the electricity, data centers, and connectivity, while AI supplies the intelligence to turn that infrastructure into inclusive, cross-border digital commerce—making Nairobi not just a smart city, but a smart gateway to Africa.
Kenya and the UAE bring different strengths to the table. Kenya has a strong innovation ecosystem, experience in mobile payments and access to the wider East African market. The UAE brings investment capacity, global trade networks and experience in building digital infrastructure.
The opportunity is to reduce the friction that makes it difficult for businesses to trade across borders. This includes easier payments, trusted digital identity, secure cloud infrastructure, better logistics and simpler onboarding for small businesses.
“The Kenya-UAE relations should help entrepreneurs in both markets access new customers. They should also make it easier for Kenyan technology companies to expand into the Gulf and for the UAE companies to use Kenya as a gateway into Africa”, explains Michael Michie, Co-founder and CEO, EverseTech.
Yet beneath that optimistic vision lies a critical discourse that dominated conversations at GITEX and in Nairobi’s tech corridors: sovereignty versus speed. According to Michie, local infrastructure changes the conversation. Kenya is no longer approaching partnerships only as a consumer of foreign technology, but as a country that has infrastructure, talent, and a growing market.
For Africa, sovereignty should not mean isolation. It should mean managed interdependence. For instance, Servernah Cloud gives organisations a local option in sectors where data protection, trust and control matter, including government, financial services and healthcare.
The next chapter of UAE–Kenya relations will not be defined solely by what is built on the ground, but by what is created in the digital realm.
As Kenya advances its digital economy ambitions and the UAE strengthens its role as a global innovation leader, cooperation in AI, smart cities, and digital trade offers a powerful platform for shared prosperity. The countries that successfully harness technology today will shape the economic landscape of tomorrow—and UAE–Kenya cooperation is well positioned to be part of that story.
Zachary Ochieng is a former Managing Editor of CIO Africa at DX5 and currently a Global Communications Strategist. He has covered technology and digital transformation across the continent for over a decade.
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