While venture capital inflows to Africa have slowed in recent years, Japan is emerging as a strategic player with a focus on technology-driven infrastructure. Japanese startups and corporate investors are increasingly channeling capital into agriculture and health sectors, both heavily impacted by climate change. This trend gained significant momentum at the Tokyo International Conference on African Development (TICAD 9), where Degas Limited, a global agri-fintech firm, announced a $100 million commitment over four years to establish Ghana as the continent’s first AI-powered agricultural hub. The initiative is not only about financial resources but also about deploying satellite imagery, precision agronomy, and AI-based financing to address food security challenges that affect millions across Africa.
Degas has already tested this model in Ghana with tangible results. The company has financed 86,000 smallholder farmers across 122,000 acres by combining satellite monitoring and AI to deliver real-time agronomic advice alongside financing solutions. This integrated approach has doubled farmer incomes and achieved an impressive 95 percent loan repayment rate, reinforcing the potential of AI-driven agriculture in Africa. According to CEO and founder Doga Makiura, Ghana’s ability to align technology with national goals has turned it into a showcase of how smallholder farmers can thrive when equipped with digital tools and financial support. With the $100 million expansion, Degas aims to scale AI-supported farmer financing, satellite-enabled crop monitoring, soil health optimization, and supply chain integration, thereby linking small farmers to broader markets and storage networks.
Backing from Japanese industry is another defining feature of this initiative. Sojitz Corporation, a trading powerhouse, is investing in Degas and collaborating on a specialized generative AI model for satellite image analysis. This geospatial foundation model, built on GPU cloud services from Sakura internet, will forecast weather conditions, natural disasters, and crop yields, creating a multi-layered technology framework to strengthen agricultural resilience. Such industrial partnerships demonstrate how Japan’s expertise in hardware, cloud, and AI can converge to create solutions tailored to Africa’s unique climate and infrastructure challenges.
The interest is not confined to agriculture. Tokyo-based SORA Technology has raised $4.8 million in seed funding to expand its AI and drone-powered health infrastructure across Africa. Active in six countries, including Ghana and Kenya, SORA deploys drones to carry out targeted malaria control while using AI-driven forecasting to predict outbreaks linked to shifting climate patterns. With backing from Japanese venture capital firms such as Nissay Capital and SMBC Venture Capital, the company plans to extend operations to 15 African countries. This builds on proven models like Zipline, which has become central to Africa’s medical supply chain with over a million commercial deliveries in Ghana, Rwanda, and Nigeria, supported by Japanese partners including Toyota Tsusho. Together, these efforts highlight how Japanese capital and technology are increasingly positioned to shape Africa’s agricultural and health infrastructure in ways that address climate risks while boosting long-term resilience.
Follow the SPIN IDG WhatsApp Channel for updates across the Smart Pakistan Insights Network covering all of Pakistan’s technology ecosystem.