What NEC's AI Push Means for Countries Still Struggling With Digital Infrastructure
NEC just announced it is pushing AI-powered agricultural tools into African markets through a new startup co-creation program, and the response has mostly been positive.
The Africa Corporate Innovation Program is a co-creation initiative with African startups focused on agriculture and food security.
However, as good as this initiative sounds, there is something people are not saying out loud. AI tools require infrastructure to function, and a significant portion of the countries this program is targeting do not have that reliable infrastructure.
What NEC Is Actually Doing
To be fair, NEC is not just entering this with a press release and a vague promise.
The program is designed as a partnership, developed alongsidethe Shell Foundation and venture capital firm Double Feather Partners, to identify African startups already working on local challenges and help them scale through proof-of-concept projects.
The focus is agriculture, basically food security, farm-to-market logistics, data-driven farming and more. NEC is bringing its ICT platform, CropScope, to the table, a tool that uses data to help farmers make smarter decisions about their land and produce.
The program launched this April, with field trials running through December and a final evaluation set for early 2027.
The goal is to build actual commercial partnerships and long-term business models, what the people behind the program are calling "sustainable co-creation."
This signals that the program is intended to be a model.
The Infrastructure Restrictions
AI-powered agricultural tools are genuinely impressive. Predictive analytics can tell a farmer in Kaduna when to plant, when to harvest, and where the closest buyer is.
Data platforms can optimize supply chains that have historically cut down value at every step. This is real and useful.
However, these tools need connectivity to function. They need electricity to charge the devices that access them.
They need enough digital literacy in the population to make the outputs meaningful. And across large parts of Sub-Saharan Africa, all three of those things are inconsistent at best, absent at worst.
Nigeria, for example, has an electricity grid that is so unreliable thatan entire shadow economy of generators, inverters, and fuel vendors has grown up around it.
A farmer in a rural area is not just dealing with bad harvest seasons or poor soil; they are dealing with the fact that the phone their data-driven farming app lives on might not have power by noon.
Why This Still Matters
The restrictions doesn’t mean NEC's program is pointless. In fact, the most interesting thing about this initiative is what it gets right.
It starts with African startups. The logic is that companies already operating in these environments understand the constraints in ways that a Japanese tech corporation designing from Tokyo simply cannot.
The co-creation model, when it actually works, produces tools that are adapted to real conditions rather than ideal ones.
There is also a longer game being played here. Programs like this one generate evidence — data on what works, what scales and what needs better infrastructure before it can function at all.
That evidence has value as it can inform how governments prioritize investment. It can show donors and development finance institutions where to focus.
The proof-of-concept is a developed argument being built for more sustained investment.
The Bigger Question for Developing Nations
The risk is not that initiatives like NEC's Africa Corporate Innovation Program fail. The risk is that they succeed in a narrow way.
They can work beautifully in a few well-connected pilot sites, get written up as success stories, and then stall the moment you try to move them twenty kilometers down the road to somewhere with no signal.
For governments across Africa, this should be a nudge and a reminder that the arrival of global tech players is not a substitute for building the conditions that make tech useful.
Broadband infrastructure, rural electrification, digital skills training — these are not just policy areas, but they are the ones that determine whether AI would be a witnessed revolution or something we would wave to from afar.
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, #DigitalInfrastructure, #AgriculturalTechnology, #AfricaTechPolicy
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