⚡ Key Takeaways

Africa’s data center capacity is projected to triple by 2030 to roughly 1.2 GW, with the continental market nearly doubling to $6.81 billion. Africa Datacenters & Cloud Days 2026 (Feb 2–3, Tunis) framed the year’s strategic window for Algeria to position alongside Morocco and Egypt as a North African anchor, backed by the Mohammadia data center, the 400G WDM backbone, and Algeria’s solar build-out.

Bottom Line: Algerian public-sector stakeholders should publish clear investor guidance on data-center incentives and land access in 2026, while operators and integrators should build visibility through continental forums before capacity commitments lock in for the rest of the decade.

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🧭 Decision Radar

Relevance for Algeria
High

Continental demand is tripling toward 1.2 GW by 2030 and the $6.81B market is open for competitive positioning; Algeria’s infrastructure assets support a credible North African-anchor claim.
Action Timeline
6-12 months

2026–2027 is the window where continental capacity gets locked in by investor commitments; decisions to attract operators and anchor partnerships are most effective inside that period.
Key Stakeholders
Algeria Invest, ARPCE, Ministry of
Decision Type
Strategic

Positioning Algeria as a continental data-center node shapes investment flows, talent development, and regulatory priorities across the next 5–10 years.
Priority Level
High

Each year of delay widens the gap with Morocco, Egypt, and South Africa, whose operators are already deep in continental partnerships and investor relationships.

Quick Take: Algerian public-sector stakeholders should publish clear data-center investor guidance — incentives, land access, power procurement — in 2026 and sponsor attendance at continental forums. Private operators and integrators should use the same window to build visibility through Cloud Days, GITEX Africa, and Pan African DataCentres. Enterprise buyers should start writing sovereign-cloud clauses into procurement now.

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