Audio By Carbonatix
The Africa Education Trust Fund (AETF) has announced that Ghana will host the inaugural Africa Artificial Intelligence (AI) Conference from November 5 to 6, 2025, in Accra.
The event, under the theme “AI for Africa: Unlocking Opportunities for Education, Innovation, and Sustainable Development,” aims to position Africa at the forefront of the global AI revolution by linking education, industry, and innovation.
The AETF AI Conference will bring together ministers, policymakers, researchers, innovators, investors, and youth leaders from across Africa and beyond. Sessions will explore how AI can transform education, finance, agribusiness, energy, communications, and governance, while creating pathways for African youth to thrive in the global economy.
In a statement, Conference Planning Committee Chairman, Prof. Sam Ndoga, said, “This conference represents a unique opportunity for Africa to define its own path in the AI era. We are not just examining the technology itself, but also how it can be applied to education, business, and development to ensure our young people are prepared to compete globally.
We are encouraged by the early support from institutions such as Margins Group, Onesta, Fidelity Bank, Meta, GLICO Group and others, and we look forward to welcoming partners from across Africa and the world.”
A distinguished Board governs the Africa Education Trust Fund (AETF) and Management team drawn from across Africa and the diaspora, reflecting the Fund’s pan-African mandate and global reach.
The Conference will also provide international and local companies the opportunity to exhibit AI-related products and services. These exhibitions will demonstrate how AI can support Africa’s competitiveness in finance, trade, education, agriculture, and other critical sectors, helping the continent to better integrate into the global economy.
Speaking at the media launch of the AETF AI Conference in Accra on Tuesday, October 14, 2025, Dr. Ekwow Spio-Garbrah, Chairman of AETF, said the dual goals of the conference are clear: “We are bringing together global and African voices to ensure that Artificial Intelligence becomes a tool for Africa’s progress—not another digital divide. This conference is a platform where ideas meet investment, and where Africa’s youth gain the skills to lead in the AI-driven global economy.”
Renowned Ghanaian educationist and, Director and Company Secretary of Africa Education Trust Fund, Prof. (Mrs.) Goski Alabi, emphasised that the conference "seeks to harness the boundless power of Artificial Intelligence to transform Africa’s education, economy, and human development landscape.
The Africa Education Trust Fund was founded on a simple but powerful conviction: that education, innovation, and enterprise must work together to secure The Africa We Want."

According to her, the launch of the conference is a declaration, that Africa will not be a passive consumer of technology, but an active architect of intelligent, ethical, and inclusive innovation.
She said "Through AETF AI conference, we are building a platform where governments, academia, private sector leaders, and young innovators will collaborate to shape policies, build skills, and create opportunities powered by AI."
On his part, Mr. J. Wendell Addy, Founder, Africa Private Sector Summit (APSS) and Advisory Board Member, Africa Education Trust Fund (AETF), said the upcoming AI in Africa Conference is both timely and historic, saying "It seeks to examine how Artificial Intelligence will shape Africa’s productivity, education, governance, and social development."
He added that the AETF’s mission is to build an education system that is globally competitive yet distinctly African, producing innovators, thinkers, and ethical leaders capable of driving the Fourth Industrial Revolution in Africa (FIRIA).
Executive Director of ONESTA, Maxwell Commey, highlighted the critical importance of AI to supporting Ghanaian farmers become more efficient in their farming methods and increasing their farm yields.
Meanwhile, Dr. Abu Bako, the Founding President of Logos Rhema, urged Africans to lead the stewardship of what he termed "divine intelligence - authentic intelligence from where we get Artificial Intelligence - in our time", describing Africa as the "birthplace of mathematics and algorithms (AI)."
He said "Africa the Birthplace of Mathematics and Algorithms (AI) Shall Rise Again by Empowering and Drawing Out the Best in Africa’s Next Generation of Ethical Leaders", adding that "The same Spirit of wisdom that guided our ancestors in numbering the stars, measuring the earth, and ordering the heavens is calling Africa again — to lead the stewardship of Divine Intelligence (Authentic Intelligence from where we get Artificial Intelligence) in our time.”
Latest Stories
-
Prudential Bank, Mastercard discuss support for SMEs and corporates
2 hours -
Threat of further violence looms after Mexican cartel rampage
3 hours -
Abesim murder case: Footballer sentenced to life imprisonment
3 hours -
Third force not the answer – Yaw Nsarkoh questions Ghana’s political fix
3 hours -
Prudential Bank champions tree crop investment at TCDA anniversary dialogue
3 hours -
Roc Nation Sports International kicks off inaugural youth football tournament in Ghana
3 hours -
‘Ghanaians are not genetically disorderly’ – Yaw Nsarkoh says consequences create order
4 hours -
Electoral Cost Efficiency in Emerging Democracies: A Comparative Analysis of Cost per Voter in Ghana’s 2020 and 2024 General Elections
4 hours -
BBC edited a second racial slur out of Bafta ceremony
4 hours -
Nigeria denies report it paid ‘huge’ ransom to free pupils in mass abduction
4 hours -
Gender Minister oversees safe discharge of rescued baby, settles bills and engages police on probe
5 hours -
Bawumia receives Christian Council goodwill visit after NPP flagbearer win
5 hours -
Afenyo-Markin urges Bagbin to summon Korle-Bu, Police, Ridge Hospitals over alleged denial of care to hit-and-run victim
5 hours -
Police reject GH₵100k bribe, arrest drug suspects with 209 slabs
5 hours -
Declare galamsey child health emergency – Pediatric Society to President Mahama
5 hours
