TED Talks Daily - AI's next frontier isn't where you might expect | Hardy Pemhiwa
Episode Date: December 23, 2025With a billion mobile phone users and a median population age of 19, Africa isn't catching up to the AI revolution — it's writing an entirely different playbook, says business leader Hardy Pemhiwa. ...He shows how a generation of entrepreneurs is using AI to teach classes, triage patients and boost farm yields through the power of local compute, local data and local languages. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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You're listening to TED Talks Daily, where we bring you new ideas to spark your curiosity every day.
I'm your host, Elise Hew.
One question being asked across the world right now is, will AI take my job?
It's a valid question and fear.
But can you imagine a world where AI actually helps increase opportunities?
In his talk, Hardy Pemiwa, whose company,
is helping to bring broadband internet to all of Africa.
Tells us why developing AI infrastructure in Africa
will help to multiply and amplify human capacity on the continent.
He says the right question to ask is,
when will the world catch up to what Africa is doing with AI?
I've been meeting a lot of people of late who ask me this question.
when will Africa catch up
to the AI revolution
and I look at them
with a lot of humility
and I say to them you're asking the wrong question
and of course a lot of them look at me with surprise
I say here is the right question
when will the world catch up
to what Africa is doing
with AI.
But before I dive into AI,
you've heard a lot about AI.
Let me take you on a geography lesson.
Africa is big.
It's 54 countries.
1.6 billion people.
And Africa is young.
I'm one of the older ones, and I consider myself young.
These are digital natives, incredible digital skills.
But it wasn't always like this.
30 years ago, there were more telephone lines in New York City
than the whole of sub-Saharan Africa.
But that was 30 years ago.
In 30 years, here is what has happened.
We now have a billion mobile phone connections.
We now have 1.1 billion mobile money accounts.
That's up from only 300 million 10 years ago.
It's driving financial inclusion at an unprecedented scale.
Today, if I needed to pay my barber,
The food vendor on the side of the road, my utility bill, my mechanic, it's easy, it's accessible, it's convenient, and it's cheap.
I use my mobile money account, whether it's eco-cash or M-Pesa, it's one of those two.
But Africa's demographic dividends is also one of its biggest challenges.
I know. A lot of people think of Africa and they think of poverty and disease and wars.
But this is not our biggest problem.
Our biggest challenge is youth unemployment.
And I think it's one challenge that AI is uniquely placed to solve.
And Africa has been able to embrace technology at an unprecedented scale.
so now that we've been through geography let me take you into the future
please meet yamurai
yamurai is 24
she's a high school graduates
born in zimbabwe and raised in zimbabwe like me
like millions of her pairs
she's tech savvy
she can type faster than any of you
she knows all the shortcuts on WhatsApp.
But up until now, her future would have been bleak.
She would have been as unemployed as any of her peers.
But for the fact that she has just graduated from one of the AI academies
that we have on the continent.
Early morning, Yemurai is teaching math using AI
to over 200 students across five schools.
These schools have got free internet.
By midday, Yemurai has joined the local nurse
at a health clinic that is not too far away from where she lives.
Helping with diagnosis, malaria, TB, Bilhazia,
that's a disease, by the way.
And by the evening, some of her neighbors are coming to see Yemurai with soil samples and with diseased plants that she takes photos off and she's able to tell them what fertilizer, what seeds, what's happening to their maize crop.
Yields are now up 40% where she lives.
But Yemurai is not a teacher.
She's not a nurse.
She's not an agronomist.
What is she?
She is what we call
an AI-amplified community entrepreneur.
She's paid for each of these services that I described
through her mobile money accounts.
And she's earning three times more than the peers in her local area.
and even those that are in the urban areas,
she's solving the problem of the shortage of teachers
that is so pervasive across most of Africa.
This is how we're going to solve the problem of a shortage of doctors
that is so pervasive across most of Africa.
And in many of the rural areas of Africa,
where there's so much arable land,
there is such a shortage of agronomists.
and now Yemurai, powered with a smartphone and an AI assistant, is able to solve these problems.
Now I'm looking at you and you're asking yourselves, how is this even possible?
I'm glad you asked.
My name is Hardy Pemiwa.
I am the CEO of Kasava Technologies.
We are the company that has literally connected.
Africa. We are connecting more than 300
towns and cities across Africa with fiber broadband,
bringing internet to more than 500 million people
across the continent. And we have now
added a platform of interconnected data centers
that are AI ready.
And this is where AI meets the infrastructure
that Kasava has been building.
Our plan now is to build Africa's first AI factory
using local data, algorithms,
local compute capacity to produce local intelligence.
We're building an AI ecosystem
for those that were previously excluded
because we understand that without AI infrastructure,
Africa is going to fall further behind.
Our AI factory is about bringing breakthroughs.
It's about bringing job creation.
It's about powering Yemurai's dream of being a doctor, an agronomist, and a teacher.
Powered with mobile broadband, mobile money, fiber broadband, and now,
GPUs that we've been able to get from
Nvidia, we are bringing to life
AI infrastructure for Africa
to compete with everybody else
in this AI age.
This is Africa's AI revolution.
It's not about substitution.
It's about multiplication.
We want to amplify human capacity
and we want to eliminate impossibility
by bringing AI to those that the world had previously excluded.
So what is our AI factory going to do?
Already we're powering more than 12,000 AI developers,
more than 1,100 startups across southern Africa,
East Africa, West Africa, and North Africa.
285 universities are going to be using our AI factory.
And, because we've already been working with enterprises for the first 30 years,
67,000 of Africa's largest enterprises,
from banks to telcos to state-owned enterprises,
are all embracing this vision of an AI-powered future for the continent.
On a continent where the median age is only 19,
this is not just an improvement of digital infrastructure.
This is a revolution that we are bringing to Africa.
Because the next one billion users of AI
are not going to use AI the same way
that the first one billion have been using it.
They are coming from places where a single AI amplified human
must do the work of 10.
They are building AI to not only diagnose diseases
that some of us have never heard of,
but to teach math and physics and chemistry in Swahili, in Debele, in Zulu, in Shona, you name it.
They're building AI in order to detect counterfeit medicines.
Africa has a big problem with counterfeit medicines.
They're building AI to diagnose crops.
They're building AI to amplify human possibility.
Because in Africa, constraints have always driven innovation.
That's why pay-as-you-go came from Africa.
That's why mobile money came from Africa,
because we didn't have bank accounts to protect.
And that's why AI models that are trained on African realities
are more robust, more efficient, and more inclusive.
So I'm going to go back to my initial question
that I've been asked by so many,
including some that I've met during this conference,
when will Africa catch up to the AI revolution?
I'm sure you agree with me
that whilst we sit here in this conference
talking about AI ethics,
in Africa we are deploying AI to save the many and not the few.
We're optimizing AI for impact
and not for social media clicks.
30 years ago, the experts on Africa
said it would take 50 years for Africa
to have the kind of mobile telephony that we have.
And they estimated that it would require $50 billion to do it.
Well, I have news for you.
70% of the mobile money transactions that are going to happen in the world today
are going to happen on African soil.
And guess what?
Africa is ready to do it again.
We want to make AI inclusive, accessible, relevant, and affordable.
because the future of AI is not just going to be written in Silicon Valley
the future of AI is going to be written in the Silicon Savannah in Kenya
it's going to be written on the streets of Lagos
it's going to be written in thousands of villages that some of us have never heard of
there are millions of Yemurai is out there that are writing the future of AI
solving problems that we didn't even know existed,
building a future where AI amplifies human potential
instead of replacing it.
In London, they are worrying
about whether teachers are going to lose their jobs
because of AI.
In Africa, we're embracing AI to solve the shortage of teachers.
In New York, they're building AI algorithms
in order to trade stocks faster.
For us, it's about AI that can increase crop yields
and reduce mortality amongst five-year-olds.
That's the future of AI.
So this is not just Africa's AI moments.
This is AI's Africa moment.
Are you coming?
That was Hardy Pemawa speaking at TED AI in Vienna, Austria in 2025.
If you're curious about TED's curation, find out more at TED.com slash curation guidelines.
And that's it for today. Ted Talks Daily is part of the TED Audio Collective.
This talk was fact-checked by the TED Research Team and produced and edited by our team,
Martha Estefanos, Oliver Friedman, Brian Green, Lucy Little, and Tonicaa Sung Marnivong.
This episode was mixed by Christopher Faisie Bogan.
Additional support from Emma Tobner and Daniela Balezzo.
I'm Elise Hugh.
I'll be back tomorrow with a fresh idea for your feed.
Thanks for listening.
