MTN Nigeria has unveiled the largest Tier III data centre in West Africa—a transformative infrastructure milestone located in Lagos, Nigeria. Known as the Sifiso Dabengwa Data Centre, this state-of-the-art facility marks a major leap in the continent’s digital and artificial intelligence landscape. Built with a total planned capacity of 9 megawatts, and a fully operational first phase of 4.5 megawatts at launch, the centre is designed with global best practices in mind, rivaling the performance and reliability of similar data facilities run by Amazon Web Services, Google Cloud, and Microsoft Azure. The project’s initial phase cost approximately $120 million, and with a second phase already in planning, MTN’s pivot toward infrastructure services reinforces its commitment to enabling Nigeria’s digital transformation.
This development signifies more than just technological growth—it signals a foundational shift in the ability of West Africa, and Nigeria specifically, to build and control cloud infrastructure critical to artificial intelligence development and digital sovereignty. The data centre is not only equipped with redundant power and cooling systems to meet Tier III standards—which means over 99.98% uptime and the ability to carry out maintenance without service interruption—it also features a built-in cloud platform. This platform, MTN Cloud, is the first of its kind in Nigeria to offer self-service orchestration, allowing users to provision servers, storage, and applications dynamically and independently, much like global hyperscalers.
With this facility, Nigerian developers and enterprises no longer need to rely exclusively on overseas data centers. They can now enjoy the benefits of low latency, better control over their data, and local currency billing—all of which reduce operational costs and support local compliance. Importantly, it offers a solution to the longstanding problem of high latency and reliance on undersea cables, which, when disrupted, often paralyze internet and cloud access across much of West Africa. The facility’s launch, therefore, improves resilience and ensures faster and more secure digital services.
Beyond the technology sector, this infrastructure opens doors for ethical and locally grounded artificial intelligence development. For decades, AI models have been dominated by Western datasets, often resulting in biases against people of color, poor representation of African languages, and systems that fail to understand African societal contexts. With computing power now available on African soil, AI researchers and engineers in Nigeria can begin training models on datasets that reflect their own people, languages, and realities. This includes natural language processing tools for Pidgin English, Igbo, Hausa, Yoruba, and other African languages, as well as vision systems tailored for local agricultural, health, or security applications. The data centre ensures that these efforts remain under the jurisdiction of Nigerian data protection laws and reinforces the country’s capacity to monitor and enforce ethical AI standards.
Startups stand to benefit enormously. Prior to this, Nigerian entrepreneurs often had to deploy their applications or AI models via foreign cloud platforms, which brought not only additional costs but complications around data privacy and foreign exchange. Now, they can host locally, reduce latency for Nigerian users, and operate in naira, avoiding volatile dollar exchanges. MTN’s pay-as-you-use cloud model further empowers small businesses and startups to scale without the upfront capital needed to build their own infrastructure. This cloud-first approach will foster growth across fintech, healthtech, logistics, and e-commerce sectors, helping local innovators compete in the global digital economy.
The data centre will also aid public sector digitization. From government digital records to the deployment of national projects like census data collection, social services, and digital identity verification, this infrastructure provides a secure, high-availability platform for Nigerian public data. MTN’s collaboration with national regulatory bodies, including the Nigeria Data Protection Commission, ensures the facility supports safe and compliant handling of government and citizen information. Moreover, the data centre has the potential to support AI-assisted tools for national planning—whether in mapping census results accurately, running surveillance for security agencies, or detecting corruption through advanced analytics.
The benefits extend to national security and anti-corruption efforts. Real-time video surveillance, drone imaging of pipelines, and the use of AI models to monitor infrastructure and detect anomalies can all be hosted and processed within this data centre. The country’s ongoing challenge of crude oil theft, for example, can be tackled more effectively with drone and satellite surveillance combined with AI-powered pattern recognition—all run on local servers. The same applies to predictive policing and public safety systems that require enormous real-time data processing and secure storage. MTN’s centre gives Nigeria the capability to deploy such systems domestically, reducing the need for sensitive information to be processed abroad.
Importantly, this data centre creates an enabling environment for developing culturally aware large language models. Just as the Arabic-language LLM “Fanar” was unveiled in Doha in 2024, there is now the potential to develop similar models in Nigeria—LLMs that speak in Nigerian idioms, respect local norms, and understand the rich tapestry of Nigerian cultures. Such models could be trained on local literature, oral history, proverbs, and dialects, ensuring that the next generation of AI is not only inclusive but also capable of preserving Africa’s linguistic and cultural diversity. For this to succeed, stakeholders must continue to invest in high-quality local datasets and build partnerships between academia, government, and the private sector.
The broader implication is that Nigeria is laying the foundation to be a continental leader in AI and cloud computing. The data centre’s launch is a clarion call for other African nations to accelerate digital infrastructure investments, and for Nigerian policymakers to adopt long-term strategies that prioritize responsible and secure data ecosystems. While the infrastructure itself is a milestone, how it is used—whether for inclusive economic growth, educational advancement, transparent governance, or ethical AI innovation—will ultimately determine its legacy.
In a world where AI and digital services will define future competitiveness, MTN’s Sifiso Dabengwa Data Centre gives Nigeria a powerful advantage. The facility is a symbol of possibility: an invitation for Africa to stop outsourcing its data, stop borrowing its intelligence, and instead build, own, and direct its digital destiny. This is not just a victory for Nigeria’s tech sector, but for its national development agenda, its youth, and its place in the fourth industrial revolution. As we stand at this intersection of infrastructure and innovation, the message is clear: Africa must act now to shape AI in its own image—or risk being shaped by others.
Written by Sonny Iroche is one of Nigeria’s pioneer AI experts, with a Postgraduate degree in Artificial Intelligence from the Saïd Business School, University of Oxford. He is Chairman of GenAI Learning Concepts Ltd. and a former investment banker with over 35 years of experience, including roles at International Merchant Bank and Century Merchant Bank. The article reflects the author’s views and not necessarily those of The Southern African Times.







