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Home African Telecommunications

MTN Joins Nvidia and Cisco in $45 Million AI Network Investment

by Onyinye Moyosore
March 27, 2026
in African Telecommunications
Reading Time: 3 mins read
MTN digital infrastructure CEO Mazen Mroue representing MTN's investment in ODC alongside Nvidia, Cisco and Nokia for AI-powered radio access networks in Africa

Africa’s largest mobile network operator is co-investing with some of the world’s biggest technology companies in a startup that could fundamentally change how mobile networks work across the continent.

MTN Group’s digital infrastructure arm has joined a $45 million Series A funding round in ORAN Development Company (ODC), a US-based startup building AI-native radio access network technology, alongside Nvidia, Cisco, Nokia, AT&T and Telecom Italia. The round was announced on Thursday, 26 March 2026.

The fact that MTN is sitting at the same table as Nvidia, Cisco and Nokia is significant on its own. These are not companies that invest together casually. When they back the same startup, they are collectively signalling that AI-powered networks are not a future possibility — they are the next standard.

What ODC Is Actually Building

To understand why this investment matters, it helps to understand what ODC does.

Every mobile network has what engineers call a radio access network, or RAN — the system of towers, antennas and software that connects your phone to the internet. It is the most expensive and complex part of running a mobile network, and traditionally it has required significant human management to keep running efficiently.

ODC’s technology, known as AI-RAN, would transform conventional cell towers into edge computing hubs capable of running AI workloads locally, rather than routing data back to centralised data centres. In simple terms, the tower near your house would not just connect your phone to the internet — it would also process AI tasks on the spot, without sending data back to a server farm thousands of kilometres away.

ODC’s platform, called the Distributed Compute Grid, is built on Nvidia’s Aerial RAN Computer Pro platform, and aims to enable low-latency AI workloads at the network edge, supporting applications from autonomous robotics to critical infrastructure monitoring.

Ronnie Vasishta, Senior Vice President of Telecom at Nvidia, described the potential plainly, saying ODC’s platform raises the innovation bar for AI-RAN and sets the stage for 6G.

Why Africa Specifically

For MTN, this investment is not just about keeping up with global network trends. It is about something more specific to the African context.

MTN’s digital infrastructure CEO Mazen Mroue framed the investment as part of a push towards what he called “sovereign AI” — the idea that African countries should develop locally hosted AI compute capacity rather than depending on offshore infrastructure.

Right now, most AI processing for African users happens on servers in Europe or the United States. Data travels thousands of kilometres, gets processed, and travels back. That creates latency, cost, and a dependency on foreign infrastructure that African governments and businesses have little control over. AI-RAN, if deployed at scale, would change that by putting computing power directly inside African network infrastructure.

In its 2025 annual results, MTN said it was positioning for AI-enabled data centres in South Africa and Nigeria and had shortlisted strategic partners for greenfield development. The ODC investment fits directly into that strategy.

What Happens Next

ODC said the funding will accelerate the commercial deployment of its Odyssey platform throughout 2026. The company is working with global customers but has not disclosed specific African deployment timelines.

That last detail is worth noting. MTN has invested and signalled its intent clearly, but when exactly AI-RAN technology reaches Nigerian or Ghanaian towers is not yet confirmed. The investment is a bet on a direction, not an announcement of an immediate rollout.

What is clear is the broader picture. MTN is no longer positioning itself as just a mobile network operator. Between its $2.2 billion move to acquire IHS Towers, its plans for AI-enabled data centres in Nigeria and South Africa, and now this investment alongside the world’s leading technology companies, MTN is building the infrastructure it believes Africa’s digital economy will run on for the next decade.

The network on your phone is about to become a lot more intelligent.

Onyinye Moyosore

Onyinye Moyosore

Onyinye Moyosore is a tech writer at Techsoma, where she covers startups, digital infrastructure, and how technology reshapes everyday life...

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