Data Oasis: Why the Cloud Should Move to the African Sunbelt
Introduction
In my last piece, I argued that Africa is sitting on the biggest energy-generative goldmine in history. Solar superpower, batteries stuffed, electrons zooming north on cables. But there is an even smarter move: instead of just pushing "heavy" electricity across oceans, why not send weightless bits and bytes instead? Data rides fiber at the speed of light for almost nothing, whereas electricity fights losses with every kilometer. So when OpenAI or Google needs another 500 MW for the next frontier model, the rational answer is to park the GPUs where the photons are collected, and the electrons are born: Africa.
AI’s Insatiable Appetite
Datacenter demand is exploding. Global electricity use by datacenters could double by 2030 and reach 8% of world consumption if AI keeps growing (IEA 2024). That is more juice than the entire United Kingdom guzzles today. Meanwhile, hyperscalers are signing deals in Virginia and Ireland at $80-120/MWh. African desert solar plus batteries is already landing below $30/MWh and heading to $15/MWh by 2030 (BloombergNEF 2025).
| Location | All-in Cost of 24/7 Power (2030 est.) | Cooling Considerations | Typical Land Cost per Acre |
|---|---|---|---|
| Northern Virginia | $90-110/MWh | Hot, humid summers | $500,000+ |
| Ireland | $70-100/MWh | Cool but expensive | $100,000+ |
| Morocco desert | $20-30/MWh | Night temps drop to 15 °C | <$2,000 |
| Mauritania | $15-25/MWh | Even cooler nights | <$1,000 |
Sources: BloombergNEF, Lazard, local land registries.
The cost gap is brutal and getting wider.
Bits Beat Bulk Electrons
Laying a transatlantic fiber pair costs about $250 million and moves 400 Tbps. Sending a petabyte of data across it costs literal pennies. Doing the same compute far the energy source and trying to ship the required 2–3 GWh as electricity would waste tens of thousands of dollars in transmission losses and higher generation costs alone. Data has zero mass and zero friction. Electricity fights copper and distance every step of the way. Advantage: internet.
Cooling? No Problem, Just Add More Sun
Yes, datacenters in the desert will need serious cooling. Good news: energy will never be scarce. Mount the same panels as solar canopies over rooftops and parking lots. They cut incoming heat by 50-70% while generating bonus kilowatts that run the chillers. At night, the desert air drops below 20 °C, so free-air cooling works half the day. Operators can also run big radiators after sunset to chill thousands of tons of water or glycol, store it in insulated tanks, and use that ice-cold reservoir as a heat sink all day long. Ample energy and free natural cooling, a data center's dream.
Quality-of-Life Jackpot for Everyone
Drop hyperscale campuses in Nouakchott or Agadir and nearby towns get rock-solid grid power as a free side effect. Local graduates become sysadmins or DevOps engineers earning $50,000-$80,000 a year instead of driving taxis. Africa starts exporting freshly trained 70-billion-parameter model checkpoints, LoRA adapters, and AI weights & biases parameter files the same way Norway exports salmon. Europe and the US get vast amounts of cheap compute without energy transmission fights in Virginia farmland or new gas peaker plants. African governments collect taxes and royalties instead of watching raw resources vanish on ships. Everybody wins, nobody coughs on diesel fumes.
Security and Latency? Already Solved
Subsea fiber from West Africa to Europe has 50-60 ms round-trip latency, perfectly fine for 99% of workloads. Critical low-latency trading stays in London or New York. Everything else (training, inference, storage, rendering, backups, and weights & biases dashboards) is happy in the desert. Microsoft and Google already run big regions in South Africa and are quietly scouting North Africa. The bottleneck is no longer tech; it is imagination.
Conclusion
Africa will be able to generate massive amounts of energy, but they don't need to export every electron. Instead, they can export answers, renders, cat videos, and gigabyte-sized parameter files instead. Let the datacenters chase the photons, not the other way round. The continent gets reliable power, high-skill jobs, and infrastructure investment. The rest of the planet gets vast amounts of renewably powered compute with efficient cooling. Trans-Atlantic fiber cables will glow white-hot with data while trans-Mediterranean energy cables stay stuffed with captured sunlight. The sun keeps rising, the cables keep humming, and nobody has to dig another hole in the ground. Sounds like the easiest win-win since peanut butter met jelly, or as they might say on the Horn, since Injera met Wat.









