African Cleantech Deals Stand Over Regular VC Funding Like A Familiar Solar Tower

By Andrew Christian  |  April 13, 2020

Africa has all the makings of the world’s cleanest economic revolution. By leveraging renewable energy sources to brighten an extensive stretch of urbanization, the continent’s sunshine is not entirely going to waste.

Even though the installations so far are less than half of what’s in place in the UK, cleantech is playing a significant role is supporting the region’s double-swelling populace.

According to the International Energy Agency, renewables form part of what will make industrialization in Africa a reality, over the next two decades.

In a report released last November, the agency predicted a sun-enabled boom in countries across the continent. This forecast could provide hundreds of millions of African homes with clean electricity for the first time.

By now, it is understandable that Africa’s hunger for energy will only continue to grow. But the IEA says it will do so at double the rate of the global average in the next 20 years while it unseats China and India as the world’s most populated region.

The rise of 800 million people from today in 2050, will, for one, bring about a continent where the demand for housing and infrastructure will give birth to a whale-sized crave for energy. On the backs of the by-the-corner industrial revolution, that energy is likely to be renewable.

The IEA report says Africa will lead the way in the global green revolution, an indication that comes with a series of significant deals by both indigenous and global investors.

The volume and calibre of solar deals signed by companies and even governments on the continent stand more significantly above conventional startup deals. Even though tech startup deals shine in numbers, the cash pumped to solarise the continent are units of substantialness, all of which prove the sector’s lucrativity.

Global Attention

Late September 2019, a trio of world powers hatched a USD 350 Mn investment in the renewable industry of Africa. The funds which came from France, Netherlands and the United Kingdom is only a fraction of the USD 1 Bn stash set up to possibly avail 17.5 GW of battery storage capacity by 2025.

The funding, which comes under the auspices of the Climate Investment Funds’ Global Energy Storage Program, is a repeat of the global community’s efforts to step up the power game in Africa.

WeeTracker’s exclusive with Mansoor Hamayun, CEO of Africa-focused utility firm BBOXX revealed that the Series D stage firm’s last USD 50 Mn funding as well came from three intercontinental investors.

Japan’s Mitsubishi (Asia), France’s Engie Rassembleurs d” Energies (Europe) and Canada’s Mackinnon, Bennett & Company (North America), among others participated in the investment.

In August 2019, Africa’s largest banking network Nedbank threw USD 26 Mn into building 40 MW commercial and industrial solar P.V facilities across South Africa. The deal, made possible alongside African Infrastructure Investment Managers, was inked with an English solar project developer known as SOLA Group.

The London-headquartered firm’s chairperson, Chris Haw, did say the partnership is fed by three expert entities whose hands on deck is coming through for a region in dire need of clean energy.

June last year, Nigeria’s solar solutions firm Arnergy raked in USD 9 Mn in growth capital. The Series A-stage firm got the consideration from Norwegian, French, Belgian and Canadian investors. Paris-based investor-led energy investor Breakthrough Energy Ventures who led the investment is backed some notables.

According to business intelligence platform Crunchbase, Bill Gates, Jack Ma, Jeff Bezos, John Doerr and Vinod Khosla are behind the firm, which ties the African solar sector to entrepreneurial warheads.

In an interview with WeeTracker, Abraham Cambridge, CEO and Founder of The Sun Exchange – a South African blockchain-based solar panel micro-leasing marketplace – admitted and emphasized that there is a lot of evidence that the rest of the world is being tipped by the solar opportunities available in the continent.

“That’s certainly a trend that we are seeing on the Sun Exchange online platform, which is specifically designed to enable people from anywhere in the world to own solar assets that power business and organisations in Africa.

Since launching in 2015, we’ve grown to having a community of 9,000+ members across 140 countries. I would certainly say that’s evidence that the rest of the world is taking note of the solar opportunity in Africa,” Cambridge said.

A Perfect Environment

African solar ventures are much like those anywhere else in the world, but what is spectacular about it? For, Sakki Van Dijk, Co-Founder and Director of Solarise Africa—a  pan-African energy leasing company for solar PV and other energy assets—it is because of a group of factors. 

“Penetration is still very low, so there is a lot of room to grow. In most of the countries, grid prices are high and the demand is much more than what can be supplied. And, the grid is not reliable in some parts of the continent. All these coupled together makes Africa a perfect environment for solar investments,” Van Dijk told WeeTracker.

Solar companies offering subsistence-level energy to consumers with low means of income have brought about a vital basis for the development of the industry.

Investors are putting their money into the off-grid rural market, and they are not wrong about the transformative impact of models that enables customers to repay the cost of a USD 200 entry-level solar system for example, over time.

Such systems provide electricity for children to study at night and can better household health by significantly reducing the reliance on dirty fuels such as kerosene.

BBOXX’s Mansor Hamayun says the key driver of the rise of African solar energy alongside investments is the falling price of solar batteries and storage methods in combination with the uptake of mobile money.

“This has made Africa the first market in the world where solar is now cheaper than other forms of energy for customers at a local level. The market has huge potential which has been recognised in recent months by the entry of strategic investors in the space, including Engie, EDF, Shell and Mitsubishi, which have all invested in BBOXX,” Hamayun explained.

Africa is one of the sunniest continents in the world, as 85 percent of its land received more than 2,0000 KW hours of solar energy per square kilometre every year.

Also, up to 60 percent of the countries’ populated reside in the Sahara, and the neighbouring regions have little or no grid access. Many governments, like that of Mali, Egypt, Morocco, Senegal and even Nigeria are setting up millions of dollars in investments and energy as a basic necessity.

This is at the front of the line. In Morocco, for example, there is a solar project worth USD 780 Mn that will have a total installed capacity of 800 MW -m and be the world’s first advanced hybridization of concentrated solar power (CSP) and photovoltaic (PV) technologies.

Mobile Money

The mobile money factor pointed out by Hamayun is not out of place. Digital loans, challenger banks and payments solutions are literally flooding the continent.

From M-Pesa in Kenya to Fawry in Egypt, PayFast in South Africa and to OPay in Nigeria, the mobile money revolution is a cosmic reaction waiting to complete. In fact, it crossed the 1 billion user mark last year.

With more Africans ditching cash, telcos becoming banks and online payments becoming the thing nowadays, solar firms are able to sell their products quickly and conveniently.

Nowhere else in the world moves more money in mobile phones than Sub-Saharan Africa, where solar is most dominant. SSA currently boasts on 45.6 percent of mobile money activity in the world, whose transaction estimate is at least USD 26.8 Bn in value for 2019 alone.

Sustainability

The Millenium Development Goals of the United Nations promise to bring universal access to electricity by 2030. Nevertheless, half of Africans lack access to energy, which is why Sub-Saharan Africa has the lowest energy access rate in the world as electricity.

According to the IEA, clean cooking is done by only one-third of Africa, while about 890 million people rely on traditional fuels. Of the 1.2 billion people on the continent, 600 million lack access to electricity to the World Bank.

Due to the inconsistency or non-existence of access to the grid, solar services in Africa have taken off as almost 10 percent of African now rely on off-grid energy to light their living spaces.

The prices for solar panels and proper battery technologies are skateboarding downhill, prompting PAYG system pioneers like as M-KOPA, Rensource Energy and Series C-stage PEG Africa to become the darlings of solar development in the region.

Small-scale solar providers focus on the rural off-grid market and have generated ample amount of electricity to power more than just TVs and lightbulbs.

Undoubtedly, such improvements are noteworthy, but there is room for them to embrace more comprehensive and robust potentials. The centrepiece of the powering Africa agenda is improving the quality of light, which requires a sustainable vision.

SDGs

BBOX CEO, Mansoor Hamayun, reminds us that overcoming energy poverty by providing access to affordable and clean energy is Sustainable Development Goal 7. In his opinion, this is the key to solving a host of goals which countries across the world have pledged to advance.

He told WeeTracker that BBOXX has scaled rapidly into new markets and geographies by forging strategic partnerships with global companies, investors and governments from developed as well as developing countries.

“The transition to clean energy is crucial if we are to tackle climate change (SDG 13), thanks to the offset of thousands of tons of carbon emissions.

Electricity enables local businesses to take off and acts as a trigger for economic growth and poverty alleviation, SDG 1. It is equally the entry point to other basic needs, such as clean water and cooking, SDG 6.

Further, as the cost of storing and generating power at home comes down in comparison with the cost of transmitting and distributing electricity through traditional grid networks, we believe that developed countries will also want to diversify their distribution-mix.

The on-grid sector will have a lot to learn from Africa’s off-grid market which is leapfrogging into this new reality.

The Best Does Not Come Without Challenges

According to Solarise Africa’s Van Dijk, there are more challenges in Africa’s solar space than there are in other continents. To explain, he points some of them out:

  • A legal framework is non – existant or very unfriendly towards solar.
  • Political will from governments are relatively low.
  • Skills to design and implement are mostly lacking.
  • Costs still very high relative to other countries outside Africa.
  • Governments see solar as competition to the grid, i.e. income streams decreasing to government.

The Sun Exchange’s Abe Cambridge says it is hard to quantify challenges in terms of fewer or more. There’s no question that it can be tricky to navigate the policy and economic uncertainty of Africa and other emerging markets.

But on the other hand, the high levels of solar irradiation across the continent make weather conditions much more consistently ideal for solar power than many other parts of the world.

“It’s safe to say, however, that the challenges to solar deployment in Africa and other developing regions are unique and different from those of more developed economies, and require innovative solutions designed to address those specific challenges.

Finance

For example, the main obstacle to deploying small-to-medium solar plants for businesses and organisations in Africa is access to affordable and appropriate finance.

Debt finance from banks is either not available or not an attractive option because the cost of the debt is high. Additionally, getting investments and payments into and out of emerging markets like Africa has historically been costly, time-consuming and high-risk.

At Sun Exchange, our technology solution and business model are built to solve these specific issues, enabling us to facilitate access to extremely affordable solar power for business and organisations, as well as fast and secure cross-border transactions,” he added.

Overcoming energy poverty through access to affordable and clean energy is Sustainable Development Goal 7 and is the key to solving a host of goals which countries across the world have pledged to advance, says Mansoor Hamayun.

“BBOXX has scaled rapidly into new markets and geographies by forging strategic partnerships with global companies, investors and governments from developed as well as developing countries.

The transition to clean energy is crucial if we are to tackle climate change (SDG 13), thanks to the offset of thousands of tons of carbon emissions. Electricity enables local businesses to take off and acts as a trigger for economic growth and poverty alleviation, SDG 1. It is equally the entry point to other basic needs, such as clean water and cooking, SDG 6.

Further, as the cost of storing and generating power at home comes down in comparison with the cost of transmitting and distributing electricity through traditional grid networks, we believe that developed countries will also want to diversify their distribution-mix. The on-grid sector will have a lot to learn from Africa’s off-grid market which is leapfrogging into this new reality,” he concludes.

Go Urban, Think Local

Research shows that innovation in urban areas grows at the same pace as populations. This is because it increased more opportunities for personal interaction and leads the way to the fortress of new ideas.

As a result, urbanities are ideal testing grounds, and directing investments towards them can improve local resilience. There would be a balancing of the overstretched power grids found in many African countries. It would also facilitate nationwide energy efficiency. 

In Africa’s most populous nation, the commercial nerve Lagos received 86 entrants every minute. The rate, which is 10 times that of New York, makes new settlements crop up. The rid is yet to pace with the scale of development, and that is almost the same case in other metropolitan hotspots across the continent.

In Lagos, for example, the cost of solar has gone down by 80 percent since 2010, making cleantech options become increasingly appealing to adopt and expand. When the expansion is doubled down on, it leads to a more commercially sustainable approach to achieving universal and reliable power for more Africans.

It would be easier to test solar solutions at a larger scale in urban areas, albeit their innovation hub status. It is hard to imagine a scalable power system being tested in a remote village. To distribute and maintain these systems would be expensive, no thanks to infrastructural issues.

In such areas where the population is limited, piloting scalable systems would be cumbersome Nevertheless, the expansion of solar services in urban and peri-urban areas can subsidize the cost of expansion of such power in rural communities.

How Nigeria Made Its Ugly Inflation Problem Look Less So With New Math

By Henry Nzekwe  |  January 16, 2026

Nigeria’s official inflation rate has undergone a statistical transformation, a technical process that has drastically changed the headline number millions use to gauge their cost of living.

The latest data from the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) reported that inflation fell sharply to 15.15% in December. This was down from 34.80% a year earlier and seemed to signal a dramatic cooling of prices. But the journey to this number involved more than just prices coming down; it came about by changing the ruler used to measure them.

At the heart of this change is a process called “rebasing.” Simply put, Nigeria had been measuring price changes for a 2025 economy using a shopping list and spending habits from 2009. After 15 years—far beyond the recommended five-year update cycle—that list no longer reflected reality.

In a nationwide survey, the NBS discovered Nigerians no longer bought 201 outdated items. Gone from the official inflation basket are relics like black-and-white televisions and Nokia 3310 phones. In their place, statisticians added 404 new products and services that people actually spend money on today, expanding the total basket to 934 items from about 740. This update, based on 2023 spending patterns, aims to make the index mirror modern life.

The new math, which was adopted at the start of last year, promptly saw Nigeria’s headline inflation drop to 24.48% in January 2025 (from 34.80% in December 2024) after the methodology and base year were changed. That headline metric largely eased throughout last year as some measure of stability was achieved. It is worth noting, however, that even as the wild price shocks from the period prior subsided, prices remained elevated.

Updating the basket was just one step

The NBS then faced a mathematical hurdle. By setting the new base year to 2024, comparing December 2025 directly to December 2024 would have created a misleading spike. Officials projected that under the old calculation, inflation would have appeared to jump to 31.2%. The NBS described this as an “artificial spike” caused by the base effect’ a technical distortion, not a real surge in prices.

To avoid this, the bureau changed its calculation method. Instead of comparing this month to the same month last year, it used a 12-month average of 2024 prices as its reference point. This “normalised” the figure and prevented the one-off distortion, resulting in the reported 15.15%.

The government and international bodies have endorsed the overhaul. The International Monetary Fund (IMF) stated the new method aligns Nigeria with international best practices and the ECOWAS framework. Central Bank Deputy Governor Muhammad Sani Abdullahi called it a fix for a “purely mathematical issue,” not an attempt to disguise higher prices.

However, the sudden shift has drawn scrutiny from prominent economists. Yemi Kale, who led Nigeria’s statistical agency for a decade, warned the transition may have been rushed, creating a gap in year-on-year comparisons that undermines analysis.

“How do you calculate year-on-year when you say the previous numbers are not comparable?” he asked, highlighting concerns about consistency and transparency.

For the average Nigerian, the disconnect between the new, lower headline rate and daily market prices remains palpable.

While the NBS reports a significant drop in food inflation to 10.84%, the cost-of-living pressure cited by groups like the Nigerian Economic Summit Group (NESG) has not disappeared overnight. The new math provides a revised benchmark, but for many, the feeling in their wallet is the ultimate measure.

South Africa’s 20% Online Gambling Tax Faces Backlash Amid Fears Of Blowbacks

By Henry Nzekwe  |  January 16, 2026

South Africa’s National Treasury has been forced to extend a public consultation on a proposed 20% national online gambling tax after facing a fierce backlash from industry and legal experts who warn the plan is unconstitutional and could backfire by pushing bettors to unregulated offshore sites.

The deadline for comment has been pushed back by nearly a month to February 27 after stakeholders requested more time to dissect the contentious proposal. The move comes as critics, including a prominent policy institute, label the tax a “naked revenue grab” that “threatens the very existence of the legal gambling market”.

The Treasury’s draft discussion paper, published in late 2025, proposes a 20% levy on the gross gambling revenue of all online betting operators. This would be a national tax, layered on top of existing provincial gambling taxes of 6% to 9%. The rationale is twofold: to curb the “social harms” of problem gambling and to capture revenue from a sector experiencing explosive growth.

Data from the National Gambling Board shows the immense scale of the market. In the 2024/25 financial year, approximately ZAR 1.5 T (USD 92 B) was wagered in South Africa, a surge of almost one-third from the previous year. The Treasury estimates the new tax could generate over ZAR 10 B annually for government coffers.

The core of the opposition lies in a potential constitutional clash. Gambling regulation is primarily a provincial competence in South Africa. Legal analysts argue that imposing a separate national tax on the same revenue base illegally centralises fiscal power.

Ayanda Zulu, a political studies graduate commenting for the Free Market Foundation, told Focus Africa that the proposal “should not see the light of day” and “undermines democratic practice due to the lack of meaningful consultation”.

Industry bodies, including the South African Bookmakers’ Association (SABA) and the South African Responsible Gambling Organisation (SAROGA), warn the combined tax burden could make licensed operators uncompetitive. They fear it will inadvertently bolster illegal offshore platforms, which offer better odds and operate outside South Africa’s consumer protection and anti-money laundering frameworks.

This is not the government’s first attempt to tax gambling revenue. Past proposals, including a 15% withholding tax on winnings in 2011 and a 1% national levy in 2012, were abandoned after consultations revealed enforcement complexities. Critics note the current proposal is particularly fraught as it seeks to tax interactive gambling (like online casinos), which remains technically illegal under South African law due to an un-promulgated 2008 act.

The Treasury defends its approach, arguing that online gambling, unlike physical casinos, creates few local jobs or infrastructure benefits and is “easily available… almost anywhere and at any time,” necessitating a unified national response.

With the extended deadline, the battle lines are drawn. The government is betting on a new revenue stream and social policy tool, while the industry and legal experts are calling the play, warning it risks undermining the rule of law and the viability of the very market it seeks to control.

Feature Image Credits: iGaming Afrika

Uganda Falls Silent Online, But A New ‘Bluetooth’ Lifeline Rises From The Streets

By Henry Nzekwe  |  January 15, 2026

On Tuesday, January 13, as the sun set over Kampala, Uganda’s digital heartbeat flatlined. Following a directive from the state regulator, the Uganda Communications Commission (UCC), mobile network operators were ordered to suspend public internet access nationwide from 6 p.m., plunging approximately 27 million users into online silence just 48 hours before a pivotal presidential election.

The official justification, citing the prevention of “misinformation, disinformation, [and] electoral fraud,” was a stark reversal of the government’s own assurances. Only a week prior, on January 5, senior officials had held a press briefing to label rumours of a shutdown as “false and misleading,” intended to cause “unnecessary fear and tension”. This pattern of pre-election blackouts is now a familiar one; a similar five-day shutdown marred the 2021 election.

For the opposition, led by pop star-turned-politician Bobi Wine, the move was a predictable act of repression aimed at stifling organisation and independent verification of results. It was a move they had anticipated and, crucially, had prepared for.

Offline Messenger Becomes Lifeline

In the weeks leading up to the vote, Bobi Wine had a recurring message for his supporters: “HAVE YOU DOWNLOADED BITCHAT YET?”. His advocacy triggered a digital scramble. According to the app’s developer, downloads in Uganda surged past 400,000 as the blackout loomed, making it the country’s most downloaded application.

Bitchat, a “weekend experiment” launched in July 2025 by Twitter (now X) co-founder Jack Dorsey, is a peer-to-peer encrypted messenger with one defining feature: it requires no internet connection.

Instead, it uses Bluetooth Low Energy (BLE) to create a “mesh network.” A message on one phone can hop to another device within a 30-meter range, which then relays it onward, potentially weaving a communication web across a city block or a protest crowd without ever touching a cell tower.

This makes it a powerful tool for censorship resistance. As Human Rights Watch and other watchdogs condemned Uganda’s shutdown as a violation of fundamental rights, Bitchat offered a technological workaround. UCC Executive Director Nyombi Thembo downplayed the app as “a small thing,” but its developer fired back: “You can’t stop Bitchat. You can’t stop us”.

The Unstoppable Signal

Uganda is not an isolated case. Bitchat and similar apps are becoming standard tools for communication in the most restrictive environments. The technology itself is not new; apps like FireChat and Bridgefy pioneered offline mesh networking years ago.

Their utility has been proven repeatedly; in Hong Kong during the 2019-2020 protests, and in Myanmar following the 2021 military coup, where Bridgefy saw over a million downloads. More recently, in Nepal and Madagascar during 2025 civil unrest, where Bitchat downloads spiked by tens of thousands as protesters sought ways to organise.

The showdown in Uganda is a microcosm of a global conflict between state control and decentralised technology. While governments can flick the switch on centralised internet infrastructure, they cannot as easily disable the short-range, ad-hoc networks that form between devices in a crowd.

The shutdown in Uganda, part of a broader crackdown that included the suspension of critical NGOs, may achieve its immediate goal of disrupting the online flow of information. However, the explosive rise of Bitchat demonstrates a determined public will to communicate.

Feature Image Credits: AFP/Getty Images/I. Kasamani

The Jobs Every Kenyan Company Is Hiring For (And The Ones They Aren’t)

By Staff Reporter  |  January 15, 2026

Kenya’s job market was a mixed bag in 2025, as the data suggests more companies are hiring but filling fewer positions. According to MyJobMag’s latest 2026 Kenya Job Search Report, a record 3,145 companies actively recruited last year, a 7.7% jump from 2024.

However, total job postings grew at less than half that rate (3.3%), meaning the hiring pie is being spread thinner. The result is a fiercely competitive landscape where certain roles are in hot demand, while others are facing a severe downturn. Here’s a breakdown of the winners and losers.

How the Data Was Collected

This report is based on a real-time analysis of 41,792 job listings posted on notable career and job website, MyJobMag Kenya, between January 1st and December 31st, 2025. The data captures active hiring demand directly from employers, providing a snapshot of where opportunities are growing and shrinking.

The Most Sought-After Jobs in Kenya

1. Accountants


Finance remains the backbone of hiring. Accountants were the single most-advertised role, accounting for a massive 15% of all top job postings. This underscores the perennial need for financial oversight and management across all sectors.

2. Sales & Business Development Executives


If you can sell, you’re in demand. Combined, roles like Sales Executives and Business Development Managers accounted for nearly 23% of the top advertised jobs. This trend points to a market focused on growth, customer acquisition, and revenue generation above all else.

3. Education & Teaching


Reflecting a national push for skills development, postings for Education and Teaching roles skyrocketed by 52.8% year-on-year. This was the highest growth among major fields, signalling a boom in opportunities from primary schools to tertiary institutions.

4. Insurance & Science Specialists


Two fields saw explosive demand from a smaller base. Job postings in Insurance surged by 47.5%, while Science roles jumped by 50.5%. These sectors are recruiting specialists to manage evolving risks and drive innovation.

5. Building/Construction


While starting from a small base, the Building and Construction sector posted a jaw-dropping 776.2% increase in job postings. This signals a major infrastructure and development push, creating new career paths for skilled professionals.

The Least Sought-After Jobs in Kenya

1. NGO & Non-Profit Roles


International funding cuts have hit hard. NGO and Non-Profit job postings collapsed by 58.5% in 2025, the steepest decline of any field. The sector posted only 187 jobs, down from 451 in 2024.

2. Research & HSE Roles


Opportunities for Researchers plummeted by 45.1%, and postings for Safety and Environment (HSE) officers fell by 46.0%. This suggests companies are pulling back on non-core, specialised functions in a tighter market.

3. Remote Work


The dream of working from home is fading in the Kenyan market. Dedicated remote roles dropped by about 34%. The market is overwhelmingly dominated by full-time, on-site positions, which made up 88% of all postings.

4. Project Management & Data Analysis


Businesses are streamlining. Project Management roles saw a stark 33.4% drop in postings, while Data, Business Analysis, and AI roles fell by 27.3%. This indicates a shift away from project-heavy and analytical overhead toward direct revenue-generating activities.

5. ICT & Healthcare


Even typically resilient sectors faced headwinds. ICT/Computer job growth was a modest 3.0%, while the broader ICT/Telecommunications industry actually shrank by 16.8%. Healthcare/Medical postings also declined by 15.4%, reflecting shifting organisational priorities.

Overall, the data indicates Kenya’s job market is becoming more selective and commercial. Employers are prioritising roles that directly drive sales, manage finances, or build essential skills. For job seekers, the shrewd strategy is to align skills with high-growth, revenue-focused sectors like sales, finance, education, and the booming construction industry.

Meanwhile, it would also be expedient to prepare for fierce competition in social sector roles and a return to the office, as remote work opportunities dry up.

Feature Image Credits: FKE-Kenya

Paystack’s Foray Beyond Payments Faces Rugged Rivals In Belated Push

By Henry Nzekwe  |  January 14, 2026

After a decade as the quiet backbone of Nigeria’s online payments, Stripe-owned Paystack is making a shrewd and decisive pivot into banking, as part of a broader recent foray beyond business payments, while hoping it’s not too late to the party.

Its latest move; the acquisition of Ladder Microfinance Bank, which has birthed a new separate company Paystack MFB—along with previous moves that saw it fold consumer play Zap into its stack and pick up assets like business banking startup Brass—communicates reinvention.

Industry analysts reckon Paystack, which has seen some shakeup recently with the controversial exit of co-founder/CTO Ezra Olubi, is keen to capture the higher-margin segments, including lending and deposits.

However, this move plunges the once-niche payments processor into a brutally competitive arena where rugged competitors like Moniepoint, Kuda, and OPay have spent years building formidable, scaled ecosystems. Paystack’s infrastructure-first approach is elegant, but the question is whether its technical prowess can compensate for being late to a party already in full swing.

Paystack’s strategy is a classic infrastructure-up gambit. For ten years, it perfected the “pipes,” processing trillions of Naira monthly for 300,000 businesses. Now, it wants to control the “tank” too.

***

By acquiring a microfinance bank (MFB) license, Paystack gains the regulatory cover to hold deposits, offer loans, and provide banking-as-a-service (BaaS). Its core advantage is data: real-time visibility into merchant revenue flows allows for sharper credit underwriting and tailored products like merchant cash advances.

This expansion is part of a necessary evolution. As one industry analyst notes, African fintech is in a “mid-life crisis,” moving from a hype-driven “First Life” to a “Second Life” where boring, profitable infrastructure and depth matter more than vanity metrics. For Paystack, payments—increasingly a commoditised service—are no longer enough. The new frontier is becoming a “financial operating system” for businesses.

However, Paystack’s conceptual advantage meets a hard reality of scaled incumbents. Its new MFB will compete with a dizzying array of players: traditional lenders, digital-first banks, and embedded finance giants. The competitive gap is significant, as shown by the scale of the leading incumbents.

Moniepoint powers a vast portion of Nigeria’s POS transactions, serving over 10 million businesses and individuals, processing USD 22 B+ monthly. Others, such as OPay (50M+ users and merchants), PalmPay (40M+ users and merchants), and FairMoney (5M+ users), have built massive consumer networks that feed into their merchant services. They have moved beyond customer acquisition into the deep, complex work of unit economics and cross-selling—the very game Paystack is now trying to join.

***

Paystack’s belated push raises several critical questions. First, can it convert its base of 300,000 businesses into active banking clients? Trust as a payment processor is different from trust as a deposit holder.

Second, does it have the distribution muscle? Its competitors have thousands of agents and consumer-facing brands; Paystack’s brand is largely B2B. Third, can it navigate the regulatory and operational complexities of lending? A recent NGN 250 M fine for its consumer app Zap shows the regulatory tightrope it must walk.

The company is betting that its technical reliability, data insights, and focus on elegant APIs for developers will carve out a premium niche. In an industry shifting toward resilience and profit, this infrastructure-play has merit. However, it is entering a market where the winners are already scaling toward profitability—OPay recently announced its first monthly profit—and the small business financing gap, while large at an estimated USD 32 B, is already being contested by many well-funded players.

Paystack’s new chapter is a bold attempt to write a second act as it trades the comfort of being a specialist for the treacherous opportunity of being a generalist. The next few years will test whether Paystack’s infrastructural elegance can disrupt a market ruled by scaled, street-smart giants.

Uganda Orders Internet Blackout Ahead Of Vote, Reversing Earlier Shutdown Denials

By Staff Reporter  |  January 13, 2026

The Ugandan government has ordered a comprehensive shutdown of public internet access and key telecommunications services, a measure taking effect just 48 hours before a presidential election where President Yoweri Museveni aims to extend his four-decade rule.

The directive from the Uganda Communications Commission (UCC), issued on January 13 and effective from 6 p.m., instructs all mobile operators and internet service providers to suspend services until further notice. The regulator stated the blackout was a “necessary” step following a “strong recommendation” from security agencies to prevent the spread of misinformation, electoral fraud, and incitement of violence.

Beyond blocking access to social media, messaging apps, and general web browsing, it also halts the sale of new SIM cards, suspends outbound roaming to neighbouring countries, and instructs operators to disable mobile Virtual Private Networks (VPNs) used to circumvent restrictions. The measures affect all connection types, from mobile data to fibre optics and satellite services.

Crucially, the government had denied any such plans just over a week earlier. On January 5, the Ministry of ICT and the UCC held a joint briefing to label rumours of an imminent shutdown as “false and misleading,” stating no decision had been made.

The shutdown directly impacts an estimated 10.6 million internet users in Uganda and occurs as the country’s 21.6 million registered voters prepare to cast their ballots on January 15. While essential services like core banking, healthcare systems, and government portals are exempted, ordinary citizens and businesses are cut off from the global internet.

This action follows a familiar pattern. During the disputed 2021 general election, authorities imposed a near-total internet blackout lasting approximately 100 hours. A report by internet research group TOP10VPN estimated that shutdown cost the Ugandan economy roughly UGX 390 B, placing it among the world’s top five for economic losses from such actions.

President Museveni, 81, faces seven challengers, including his main rival from the last election, opposition leader Bobi Wine. Campaigning has been tense, with the opposition reporting hundreds of arrests among its members.

Digital rights advocates condemn the move as an erosion of fundamental freedoms. A similar shutdown in 2021 was criticised by groups like CIPESA for curtailing access to information and hindering independent election monitoring during a crucial democratic process.

Feature Image Credits: Unwanted Witness

Nigeria Moves To Enforce Strict AI Rules Amid Adoption Challenges

By Staff Reporter  |  January 13, 2026

Nigeria is on track to pass landmark legislation establishing one of Africa’s first comprehensive regulatory frameworks for artificial intelligence. The National Digital Economy and E-Governance Bill, expected to be enacted by March, aims to balance innovation with ethical safeguards in one of the continent’s most dynamic digital markets.

The bill empowers the National Information Technology Development Agency (NITDA) to act as a “super-regulator,” classifying AI systems by risk, mandating transparency, and requiring annual impact assessments for high-stakes applications in finance, public administration, and surveillance. Non-compliance could lead to fines of up to NGN 10 M (~USD 7 K) or 2% of an AI provider’s annual Nigerian revenue.

This push for governance reflects Nigeria’s broader ambition to transition from rapid digital adoption to sustainable, value-driven growth. The digital economy is projected to generate USD 18.3 B in revenue by 2026, with the AI market alone forecast to hit USD 434.4 M.

However, the regulatory sprint unfolds against a backdrop of significant readiness challenges, creating a complex landscape of competing priorities. Nigeria’s pioneering push to regulate artificial intelligence confronts significant implementation hurdles, including the challenge of avoiding legislative redundancy and ensuring coherent enforcement across government agencies.

These governance efforts are set against a backdrop of low domestic AI adoption, estimated at just 8.7%, which reflects deeper structural barriers. The country’s AI readiness ranks 72nd globally, with adoption concentrated in large firms due to high costs and persistent infrastructure gaps that limit broader access and innovation.

Authorities acknowledge that regulation alone is insufficient. “You cannot be ahead of innovation,” said Kashifu Abdullahi, Director General of NITDA. “Regulation is not just about giving commands. It’s about influencing market… so people can build AI for good.”

Simultaneously, a massive upskilling effort is underway. In collaboration with Microsoft, over 350,000 Nigerians have been reached with AI skills training, part of a push to prepare for an estimated USD 1.5 T AI-driven opportunity for Africa by 2030. This focus on demand-side readiness is critical; as stakeholders warn, without leaders who understand AI, adoption will stall.

The proposed law also includes provisions for regulatory “sandboxes”—controlled environments where startups can test technologies under supervision—signalling an intent to foster, not stifle, innovation.

For global tech firms from Google to Chinese cloud providers, operating in Africa’s most populous nation is about to change. Nigeria’s bet is that by setting clear rules and building skills today, it can harness AI’s potential to drive inclusive growth, rather than be disrupted by it.

The Five Best-Performing Stock Markets In Africa (2025 Scorecard)

By Henry Nzekwe  |  January 12, 2026

In 2025, an exciting narrative permeated global finance in the shape of several African stock markets delivering some of the world’s highest returns for foreign investors, decisively outperforming major global benchmarks. This surge, tracked by the investable indices of Morgan Stanley Capital International (MSCI), signals a growing recognition of the continent’s economic potential.

MSCI indices are the leading global benchmarks for international investors. The ranking below is based on the USD-denominated returns for 2025 from the specific African markets included in the MSCI Frontier and Emerging Markets Indices.

A Look at the Top Performers

1. Egypt


Egypt’s stock exchange was the uncontested leader, delivering a stellar 99% dollar return in 2025. This phenomenal performance was powered by double-digit share price growth in major companies like Commercial International Bank (CIB) and a 6.2% appreciation of the Egyptian pound against the US dollar, which amplified gains for foreign investors. Momentum has continued into 2026, with the MSCI Egypt Index showing strong gains in early January.

2. Kenya


The Nairobi Securities Exchange (NSE) secured second place with a 52.2% return, building on its position as Africa’s top-performing MSCI market in 2024. Unlike Egypt, Kenya’s gains came almost entirely from share price appreciation, as the Kenyan shilling was largely stable against the dollar. Performance was driven by heavyweights like Safaricom (+66.3%) and KCB Group (+58.1%), as well as spectacular surges in small-cap stocks such as Kenya Power.

3. Nigeria


Nigeria’s market closed 2025 on one of its strongest notes in nearly two decades. The MSCI Nigeria Index posted a 47.2% gain, reflecting a broader market rally fueled by macroeconomic stabilisation, banking sector recapitalisation, and significant market reforms. The total market capitalisation approached a landmark NGN 100 T, underscoring the surge in investor confidence.

4. & 5. Zimbabwe and Côte d’Ivoire


Rounding out the top five, Zimbabwe and the regional Bourse Régionale des Valeurs Mobilières (BRVM), which serves Côte d’Ivoire and other West African Economic and Monetary Union states, posted very similar returns of 44.5% and 43.6%, respectively. Their performance highlights strong investor interest in diverse frontier markets across the continent.

Why Weren’t Other High-Flying Markets on This List?

Reports of even more explosive returns in other African markets have made waves. For instance, the Malawi Stock Exchange soared nearly 248% in 2025, and Ghana’s exchange delivered over 154% for dollar investors.

These markets do not appear in the MSCI top five because they are not currently included in the specific MSCI Frontier and Emerging Markets Indices that the ranking is based on. MSCI indices are designed to be investable benchmarks for international investors, and they include markets based on criteria like size, liquidity, and openness to foreign ownership.

MSCI tracks a specific, investable basket of large and mid-cap stocks in 10 African countries, serving as a practical benchmark for global institutional capital. Other rankings often use local, broad-market indices (like the Malawi Stock Exchange All Share Index), which include all listed companies and can be driven by a handful of high-flying stocks in very small, illiquid markets.

In short, MSCI’s list shows where large-scale, international money flowed in 2025, while other lists may capture dramatic local rallies in smaller, more specialised markets.

What This Means for Investors

While the growth is impressive, it’s important to understand the scale. African equity markets, while progressing, remain small and concentrated compared to global peers. The entire continent’s listed companies represent only about 0.4% of global market capitalisation. Activity is heavily concentrated in a few nations like South Africa, Egypt, Nigeria, and Morocco, and markets often face challenges with liquidity and high trading costs.

Nevertheless, the 2025 performance is a powerful signal. It demonstrates that with the right reforms and stable conditions, African capital markets can offer compelling risk-adjusted returns, attracting the attention of global investors looking for the next generation of growth.

The strong showing from frontier markets like Kenya, Nigeria, and Côte d’Ivoire suggests growing depth and resilience beyond the continent’s larger, more established emerging markets like Egypt and South Africa.

Nigeria’s Complicated Crypto Story Enters New Phase: Revenue First, Rules Later

By Henry Nzekwe  |  January 8, 2026

As Nigeria’s new cryptocurrency tax regime takes effect this January, the government’s push for revenue is colliding head-on with an industry still waiting for clear rules. The industry yet again finds itself caught between aggressive government policy and regulatory uncertainty.

While authorities push to collect revenue from digital asset transactions, most crypto exchanges still operate without formal licenses, highlighting what experts call a “revenue first, rules later” approach that threatens to stifle the very market it aims to formalise.

Ayotunde Alabi, CEO of Luno Nigeria, a prominent crypto exchange, identifies the core issue as an enforcement credibility gap. “When taxation moves faster than licensing and market conduct rules, you create uncertainty over who is ‘in scope,'” he tells WT.

This ambiguity, he warns, unfairly raises costs for serious operators and may push users toward informal peer-to-peer channels, defeating the goal of a transparent, taxable market.

The Nigeria Tax Administration Act 2025 mandates that individuals pay personal income tax on crypto gains. For platforms, called Virtual Asset Service Providers (VASPs), non-compliance brings severe penalties, including an initial fine of NGN 10 M (~USD 7 K), followed by NGN 1 M (~USD 700.00) monthly, with their operational licenses at risk.

However, this firm tax directive exists alongside a regulatory process moving, as one industry stakeholder puts it, at a “snail’s pace.” Over a year after the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) launched a regulatory sandbox, only two local exchanges, Quidax and Busha, hold provisional licenses.

Dozens of other startups remain in limbo. Notably, a similar effort in South Africa, another African crypto hub, yielded 59 operating licenses in April 2024, highlighting contrasting momentum.

This misalignment creates a practical dilemma for businesses. Regulators state that failure to pay tax can lead to license withdrawal, but most firms cannot secure a license in the first place. Alabi explains that for platforms, true “compliance” now requires navigating two parallel tracks.

On one track is tax compliance, he notes, which entails registering with authorities and building systems to produce audit-ready reports that map customer gains to naira values. On the other is regulatory readiness, which he explained as demonstrating progress in the SEC’s onboarding pipeline and maintaining robust internal controls, even while a full license remains out of reach.

For the average user, Alabi says compliance is “practical and boring.” It means keeping basic records of transactions and using platforms that can provide formal statements. “The key point,” he stresses, “user response will be driven less by the existence of tax and more by the usability of tax compliance. If filing and record keeping feel impossible, activity will not disappear; it will move.”

A Pattern of Enforcement Before Clarity

Nigeria’s relationship with cryptocurrency has been a rollercoaster of harsh crackdowns and tentative acceptance. In 2021, the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) banned banks from servicing crypto exchanges, only to reverse the policy in late 2023.

The most dramatic enforcement action came in early 2024. Nigerian authorities detained two Binance executives for months, accusing the global exchange of manipulating the naira’s value and facilitating illicit flows. The government also directed telecom providers to block access to Binance and other major platforms.

These blocks remain partly in place today, creating a contradictory landscape where the state simultaneously pursues taxes from an industry it actively restricts. This top-down approach has defined Nigeria’s strategy. The SEC has proposed a NGN 1 B (~USD 700 K) capital requirement for VASPs, a sum critics call prohibitive.

For operators, the core complaint is sequencing. The tax law explicitly states that failure to comply can lead to license revocation. But for the majority of companies still awaiting approval, this threat feels abstract.

“How will they implement the tax regime coming next year without proper operator licences when only two exchange platforms are licenced?” financial analyst Rume Ophi asked in November.

Nevertheless, the responsibility for reporting and enforcement will fall heavily on the exchanges. They are required to maintain seven years of customer transaction records, report suspicious activity, and provide periodic customer reports to the tax authority. However, without a clear, accelerated pathway to licensing, critics fear the state lacks the structured mechanism to verify these obligations at scale.

What Comes Next?

The government views crypto taxation as a fair step toward recognising and integrating a booming sector. Between July 2024 and June 2025, crypto transaction values in Nigeria reached an estimated USD 92.1 B. Taiwo Oyedele, Chairman of the Presidential Fiscal Policy and Tax Reforms Committee, has called the new regime “fair, balanced, and globally competitive.”

But industry leaders stress that taxation alone is not a regulatory framework. For the policy to build confidence rather than drive activity underground, clarity and coordination are needed immediately.

To turn this into a confidence-building move, the Luno Nigeria boss argues Nigeria needs an explicit licensing timetable and aligned reporting requirements between the SEC and the tax authority. The goal, he says, should be a system where “one dataset satisfies both” regulators.

Looking at the next three to six months, Alabi predicts a fragmented response from Nigerian crypto users. He expects more “platform shopping” as users seek venues that provide clear documentation for tax purposes. He also anticipates a short-term spike in informal peer-to-peer trading if the tax rollout is perceived as punitive or unclear.

“The cautionary signal is sequencing and coherence,” Alabi says, assessing the message sent to global investors. “If taxation is implemented while licensing remains unclear or slow, global firms interpret that as ‘revenue first, rules later,’ which increases perceived policy risk.”

To turn this into a confidence-building move, he argues Nigeria must publish an explicit licensing timetable and align the reporting demands of the SEC with those of the tax authority. The goal is a system where “one dataset satisfies both.”

For Alabi, the path forward hinges on specific, technical fixes. He says Nigeria’s framework must immediately achieve four things: precise definitions of taxable events, clear valuation standards, proportional enforcement with a realistic transition period, and a trustworthy dispute resolution process.

“Without these,” he implies, “compliance becomes viewed as a risk, not a responsibility. That perception alone can push activity underground.”

His long-term prescription involves three critical actions over the next twelve months: finally operationalising the SEC’s licensing pipeline at scale, building a standardised crypto tax reporting model, and creating a “pro-innovation compliance compact” with the industry.

The economic upside of aligning these pieces is significant. As Alabi puts it, “Formal rails improve investor confidence, reduce fraud exposure, and widen the taxable base without suffocating the market.” The alternative is a continued cycle of uncertainty, where the government’s reach for revenue risks pushing the very economy it wants to tap further into the shadows.

‘Love Is Blind’ Reality Series Will Make Its African Debut In 2026

By Wayua Muli  |  January 8, 2026

It’s official. Netflix’s hit reality dating show, Love Is Blind, is coming to Africa! The streaming service has confirmed it will start shooting sometime in 2026, although cast and shoot details are yet to be revealed. The announcement, made early January, 2026, marks the latest international expansion for the social experiment that challenges singles to find marriage partners without ever seeing them face-to-face.

This African variant is part of Netflix’s aggressive 2026 content strategy for the continent. The South African edition will follow the established global format: Singles will enter purpose-built ‘pods’ to date through speakers, forming emotional bonds before deciding whether to propose. The couples only meet in person after one of them proposes marriage, moving on to a ‘honeymoon’ retreat and eventually living together in the real world to test if their ‘blind’ connection can survive cultural, family, and physical pressures.

While Netflix has yet to announce the official hosts, the franchise typically utilises high-profile celebrity ‘power couples’ to mentor the participants. Netflix has not yet confirmed a premiere date either, but industry insiders expect the show to anchor the streaming giant’s late-2026 reality line-up.

This isn’t the only flower in Netflix’s bouquet of offerings for the continent – and for the world – this year. This announcement has come on the heels of Warner Bros. Discovery’s decision to back the streaming service in its efforts to purchase the movie house, against a competing bid from Paramount Skydance.

Netflix stock rose 0.1% on January 8, 2026, upon the revelation that the WBD Board had requested shareholders to reject Paramount’s offer, saying that while the Netflix one was smaller, it offers more certainty and better financial prospects. Netflix is offering shareholders USD 23.25 in cash and shares, with the strong possibility of Netflix shares increasing in value given its trajectory. Netflix co-CEOs Ted Sarandos and Greg Peters said the WBD Board continued to view Netflix’s agreement as “the superior proposal.

“The Board unanimously determined that Paramount’s latest offer remains inferior to our merger agreement with Netflix across multiple key areas,” WBD Board Chair Samuel Di Piazza Jr, also stated.

In the interim, and while the deal is still subject to shareholder and regulatory approval, Netflix has filed an antitrust paperwork notification in anticipation of future movements on the deal.

Finally, French media giant Canal+ has received reprieve in its quest to re-grow its subscriber base across Africa; 12 WBD channels which the service was set to lose come January 1, 2026, remain in its offerings after last-ditch talks to resolve a pricing dispute bore fruit on December 31, 2025.

Under the renewed deal, DStv, which Canal+ now owns, will flight CNN International and Cartoon Network exclusively in South Africa, with non-exclusive agreements for territories in the rest of Africa. While Paramount Africa has shut down – and therefore ceased to offer access to channels such as BET TV – there is some hope for African subscribers hungry for the sort of global content WBD has to offer.