An Integrated, Prosperous and Peaceful Africa.

Top Slides

AU Commences Validation of Data Governance Frameworks to Accelerate Digital Single Market by 2030

AU Commences Validation of Data Governance Frameworks to Accelerate Digital Single Market by 2030

Share:
December 02, 2025

The African Union Commission (AUC) officially launched a crucial four-day Validation Workshop for the Continental Data Governance Frameworks today in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia. The workshop brings together experts from AU Member States, Regional Economic Communities (RECs), and key partners to review and finalize the draft frameworks on Data Categorisation& Data Sharing, Cross-Border Data Flows, and the Continental Open Data Strategy.

The validation taking place from December 1-4 2025, marks a major milestone in the implementation of the AU Data Policy Framework (AUDPF), accelerating the continent's journey toward establishing a secured Digital Single Market (DSM) by 2030, as envisioned in the Digital Transformation Strategy for Africa (DTS).

In her opening remarks, Souhila Amazouz,  Officer in Charge of the Information Society Division at the AUC, underscored the central role of data in Africa's future development.

“Data is not just a resource; it is the bedrock of Africa’s digital transformation and economic future,” stated Ms. Amazouz. “This workshop could not have come at a better time, ensuring we collectively develop the adequate frameworks and instruments to responsibly, safely, and ethically use data to achieve fair and inclusive representation in digital space and ensure economic benefit for all Africans.”

For Africa remarkable opportunities can arise from the ongoing digital transformation, technological innovation and operationalization of the African Continental Free Trade Agreement (AfCFTA) as it can create a Data Centre Market of an estimated size of USD 3.85 billion by 2030.

The Draft Data Categorization, Open Data and Cross Border Data Flow Frameworks provide the essential legal and technical tools to harmonise data policies across the continent, while balancing the need for data protection and security with the immense value creation potential of cross-border data exchange.

The documents under validation are crafted to address the persistent fragmentation of digital regulations across the continent and to strengthen Africa’s capacity to govern, share, and utilise data effectively. Together, they aim to build a coherent, trusted, and future-ready ecosystem that supports innovation, protects citizens, and enables data-driven development.

At the core of this work are three key frameworks. The Data Categorisation and Sharing Framework establishes common standards to safeguard sensitive and critical data while enabling responsible access and use for innovation and public benefit. The Cross-Border Data Flow Framework proposes collaborative trust mechanisms that allow data to move securely and seamlessly across Member States, reinforcing the ambitions of the AfCFTA and accelerating digital trade. Complementing these is the Open Data Strategy, which guides Member States in building transparent, efficient, and innovation-friendly public data systems that unlock new economic and social value and make data available to support  the development  of deployment  advance Artificial Intelligence in Africa.

According to Souhila, the availability of data, the youth dividend and rapid technology adoption makes the continent a fertile ground for innovation with the potential to contribute  up to $712 billion to Africa’s economy by 2030. The endorsement of the AU Data Policy Framework by the AU Executive Council in February 2022 shows the political will and collective commitment of our countries to responsibly embrace the data revolution and enable data to flow on the continent.

The workshop is being held  with support of  the German Federal Ministry for Economic Cooperation and Development (BMZ) and the European Union, under the Data Governance in Africa Initiative jointly implemented by AUC  Team , the AU Development Agency- New Partnerships for Africa's Development (AUDA- NEPAD) and the German Development Cooperation (GIZ).

During the opening session, Dr. Tobias Thiel, Director of the GIZ Office to the African Union, reaffirmed the commitment to the joint vision: “The frameworks we are validating this week are essential building blocks towards a trusted, interoperable, and rights-respecting African data ecosystem. We are committed to supporting the African Union in establishing common standards and promoting Open Data as a true driver of socio-economic value for the continent.”

The outcomes of this validation workshop will inform the finalisation and eventual submission of these pivotal frameworks to the relevant AU policy organs for adoption.

About the AU Data Policy Framework (AUDPF)

The AU Data Policy Framework (AUDPF), adopted in February 2022, is built on a vision to unlock the transformative potential of data to empower African countries, improve people's lives, safeguard collective interests, protect digital rights, and drive equitable socio-economic development. It is guided by core principles including transparency, accountability, inclusion, equity, and fair competition. The Framework aims to achieve several critical objectives for the continent: it seeks to strengthen national data systems and simultaneously enable data to flow across borders to significantly increase value creation and data-enabled business opportunities. Furthermore, a core goal is to empower African citizens to exercise control over their data by building a secure and trustworthy data ecosystem, while also working to reinforce cooperation on data governance and data transfers at all national, regional, and continental levels.

For more information:

Ms. Souhila Amazouz, OIC, Information Society Division, African Union Commission. E-mail: souhilaa@africanunion.org

For Media Inquiries: 

  1. Ms. Bezayit Eyoel | Information Analyst | Department of Infrastructure and Energy| African Union Commission| E-mail: BezayitE@africanunion.org|
  2. Mr. Gamal Eldin Ahmed A. Karrar | Senior Communication Officer | Information and Communication Directorate (ICD), African Union Commission | E-mail: GamalK@africanunion.org

 

Images

Department Resources

November 05, 2025

WE, the Heads of State and Government of the African Union Member States (Full List of Attending Heads of State and Government), gathered

October 06, 2025

AFRICA’S DEVELOPMENT
D Y N A M I C S
INFRASTRUCTURE, GROWTH AND TRANSFORMATION
OVERVIEW

May 22, 2025

The African Guidelines on Integrating Data Provisions in Digital Trade Protocols are part of the broader framework established by the AfC

July 28, 2022

This Data Policy Framework aims to strengthen and harmonise data governance frameworks in Africa and thereby create a shared data space a

September 19, 2020

The African Union Commission (AUC) envisions “an integrated continent that is politically united based on the ideals of Pan Africanism an

June 24, 2020

Highlights of the cooperation with the GIZ-project “Support to the African Union on Migration and Displacement”

June 24, 2020

Violent extremism is a global issue.

February 10, 2022

Agenda 2063 is Africa’s development blueprint to achieve inclusive and sustainable socio-economic development over a 50-year period.

December 01, 2025

Transforming Migration Governance in Africa

November 18, 2025

We, Heads of State and Government of Member States of the African Union, guided by the principles of Agenda 2063 and sustainable developm