
Kenya is enhancing its partnership with the United States in the realms of artificial intelligence (AI) and digital transformation. Recent discussions centred on critical areas such as technology investment, data governance, and the responsible development of AI.
The Department for Information and Communication Technology (DICT) and the Digital Economy hosted a delegation from the United States, including representatives from the Embassy and the American Chamber of Commerce (AmCham). The purpose was to analyse avenues for expanding cooperation between the two nations.
Key topics discussed during the meetings included increasing technology investments in Kenya, promoting trusted data governance to boost economic development and digital trade, amongst others.
The talks highlighted the essence of aligning Kenya’s policy and regulatory frameworks with internationally recognised standards. This proposed alignment will improve interoperability, uphold secure and efficient cross-border data flows, and encourage greater investment, digital innovation, participation, and inclusion in the global digital economy.
Leading the Kenyan side in Nairobi was John Tanui, Principal Secretary for ICT and the Digital Economy, who was joined by Immaculate Kassait, Kenya’s Data Protection Commissioner.
Tanui remarked that the discussions were focused on enhancing Kenya’s digital investment climate, building on previous engagements from President William Ruto’s trip to Silicon Valley, and advancing essential policy initiatives, including the national data governance policy and the AI and emerging technologies policy.
“As Kenya accelerates its initiatives in digital transformation and AI, robust data governance is increasingly identified as a strategic nationwide asset,” Tanui stated.
He further said that strong data protection frameworks are not obstacles to innovation; rather, they serve as the basis for safe digital services, responsible AI, cross-border data interoperability, investor confidence, and sustainable economic growth and development.
Tanui pointed out that aligning Kenya’s national frameworks with international best practices would help elevate the country’s status as a trusted digital economy.












