Home Spotlight IFC Invests in Convergence Partners’ Fund to Boost Digital Access in Africa

IFC Invests in Convergence Partners’ Fund to Boost Digital Access in Africa

by Radarr Africa
IFC Invests in Convergence Partners’ Fund to Boost Digital Access in Africa

To help strengthen broadband infrastructure and improve online access to digital services for individuals and businesses in more than 12 countries in sub-Saharan Africa, IFC announced that it invested in a new fund by Convergence Partners Africa, an investment management firm focused on the technology, media and telecom sectors in Africa.

The COVID-19 pandemic has accelerated the adoption of digital technologies and the demand for digital infrastructure which are helping connect businesses with customers and suppliers, creating new channels to access health and education services, and enabling entrepreneurs. However, it has also exposed the digital divide in Africa.

IFC’s equity investment of $25 million in Convergence Partners’ Digital Infrastructure Fund will promote improved digital connectivity and access to digital services by investing in independent operators and service providers in sub-Saharan Africa. The fund has a target size of $250 million. IFC invested in Convergence Partners’ previous fund, Convergence Partners Communication Infrastructure Fund.

Investments made through the Digital Infrastructure Fund will support critical digital infrastructure companies and projects including broadband networks, fibre cable systems, mobile towers, digital service provider platforms and data centres, adding new connectivity and data centre capacity in many countries in Africa where such infrastructure is currently limited.

“We are very pleased to extend our relationship further with IFC, who were also investors in our last fund and co-investors with us in underlying portfolio companies. We share a joint ambition to invest in those businesses on the African continent that is contributing meaningfully towards addressing the digital inclusion gap that exists.

“Africa is ready for high throughput pervasive fibre networks, independent hyper-scale data centres, edge, AI, 5G and IoT. Connectivity is at the foundation of 4IR. Our new Digital Infrastructure Fund is the platform for building Digital Africa for future generations,” said Andile Ngcaba, Chairman of Convergence Partners.

Internet access in Africa relies largely on mobile networks. Mobile broadband penetration stands at only about 34 per cent and fixed broadband at less than five per cent across most of sub-Saharan Africa, excluding South Africa.

Africa also experiences a large urban and rural connectivity divide, with 28 per cent of urban households having access to the Internet compared to only six per cent in rural areas, according to the International Telecommunications Union.

“Increased broadband connectivity supports economic growth, job creation, and quality of life. Together, we can help connect more homes and businesses in Africa by supporting funds such as the Convergence Partners Digital Infrastructure Fund to bridge the $100 billion digital infrastructure financing gap to reach universal connectivity by 2030,” said Makhtar Diop, IFC’s Managing Director.

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