A landmark report on Africa-Europe cooperation in AI governance has warned that Africa’s regulatory capacity has grown significantly but has not translated into meaningful influence over global AI rules — and that the political window to change that is narrowing.
The report, produced by Nairobi-based digital law and policy organization The Lawyers Hub in partnership with French public development finance institution Agence Française de Développement, was launched this week at the Africa Forward Summit 2026 in Nairobi. It calls for five priority actions to reset the Africa-Europe relationship, including a dedicated African Union-European Union regulatory dialogue, a $200 million Africa AI Governance Capacity Fund and a joint Africa-Europe AI research consortium led by African principal investigators.
The continent is not short on AI ambition. Fifty-two of 54 African nations signed the 2025 Africa Declaration on Artificial Intelligence, and Kenya, Ghana, Zimbabwe and South Africa are all actively drafting AI strategies or legislation. But the report argues that strategies are being written faster than the institutions needed to implement them — and that the world’s first comprehensive AI legal framework, the EU AI Act, was built without African input despite imposing compliance costs of up to €400,000 on providers of high-risk AI systems. The gap between ambition and enforcement, the report says, is where digital sovereignty is actually won or lost.
African regulatory progress is real but disproportionate to global influence. Around 45 African countries have enacted data protection legislation, and 39 now have operational Data Protection Authorities, up from fewer than 10 in 2015. Yet African nations remain largely absent from OECD AI governance bodies where binding standards are set. The EU AI Act poses specific risks for African firms and governments, with initial compliance costs estimated at €193,000 to €330,000 — rising above €400,000 with annual maintenance — representing a structural burden for institutions that had no role in shaping the regulation.
Kenya’s proposed Artificial Intelligence Bill 2026 is among the most comprehensive AI-specific legal frameworks yet attempted on the continent. It establishes an Office of the AI Commissioner, introduces risk-based classification modelled on the EU approach, and addresses synthetic media and deepfakes. The report warns, however, that the bill’s credibility depends entirely on whether the commissioner is properly funded from day one.
South Africa’s experience offers a cautionary lesson. The country’s Draft National AI Policy was withdrawn in April 2026 after AI-generated academic and legal references were discovered in the gazetted document. The report argues the episode underscores that AI governance frameworks must apply the same verification standards to policymaking that they demand of regulated systems.
Ghana and Zimbabwe have both launched national AI strategies in 2026, with Ghana projecting AI contributions of up to 500 billion Ghanaian cedis to GDP by 2035. Zimbabwe’s strategy is institutionally ambitious on paper, but none of its proposed bodies yet exist in operational form — a gap the report identifies as the defining implementation challenge.
Continental AI architecture is beginning to take shape. The East African Community adopted a regional AI fund and coordination framework in Kigali, while the African Development Bank and UN Development Programme launched the AI 10 Billion Initiative at the Nairobi AI Forum 2026, projecting up to 40 million jobs and approximately $1 trillion in GDP contribution by 2035.
The report proposes five priority actions to shift the Africa-Europe relationship from regulatory dependency to genuine co-governance: an AU-EU AI Regulatory Dialogue between data protection authorities; a $200 million Africa AI Governance Capacity Fund over five years; an AU-EU Electoral AI Protocol ahead of the 2027 African election cycle; reform of the GDPR adequacy process to include African participation; and a joint Africa-Europe AI Research Consortium led by African principal investigators.
Africa currently captures an estimated 2.5% of global AI investment, yet experts project AI could inject $2.9 trillion into the continent’s economy by 2030, lift 11 million people out of poverty and create 500,000 jobs annually. The governance question, the report argues, is therefore as much an economic one as a political one.
The findings land at a moment of intense geopolitical competition over who gets to write the rules of AI globally. The report identifies three power blocs driving the contest in sharply different directions. The United States is pushing market-led governance, with a July 2025 presidential executive order explicitly prioritizing the export of the American AI technology stack as a tool of technological dominance. China is taking an infrastructure-first approach, expanding its AI footprint across Africa through Huawei, Alibaba Cloud and the Digital Silk Road while operating some of the world’s most restrictive domestic AI regulations. The European Union is positioning its rights-based regulatory model — anchored in the EU AI Act — as the global alternative.
Africa sits at the center of that contest but largely outside the rooms where decisions are made. The OECD AI Principles were negotiated among high-income countries. ISO and IEC AI standardization committees are dominated by European and North American experts. The UN AI Advisory Body has no binding mandate. Into that vacuum, powerful states and corporations insert their own frameworks — with or without African consent.
The report argues that the window to change that dynamic is open now but will not stay open. The cost of missing it, it concludes bluntly, is another decade of structural dependency.





