Finland raises €8,7m for tech start-ups in Africa
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JOHANNESBURG. — The Finnish government has raised €8,7m to fund technology start-ups in SA, Botswana, Namibia, Tanzania and Zambia through the second phase of its Southern Africa Innovation Support (SAIS) Programme.

The funds will be allocated to companies from these countries until June 2021. The Nordic government wanted to invest in start-ups in Africa, which it says offers large, young markets that can sustain mobile phone applications, cybersecurity services and health technology, said Juhana Tuunanen of the Finnish ministry of foreign affairs.

Various companies from these countries attended the Slush technology conference, which was held in Helsinki, Finland, in December. Slush is a non-profit organisation. The largest technology start-up conference in Europe was attended by nearly 20 000 people over two days.

Innovation is increasingly recognised as a key factor for sustainable development in Southern Africa Over the past few years its Asian attendees have been its fastest-growing group but there has been growing interest from African start-ups that have attended and/or exhibited, according to Miki Kuusi, one of the co-founders of Slush.

African companies at Slush included Hackers Guild, a Zambian software coding school, as well as Manketti, a forestry consulting group that operates in Finland, Denmark, Zimbabwe and SA. SAIS believed that many start-ups in Southern African Development Community countries were positioned to operate together.

“Innovation is increasingly recognised as a key factor for sustainable development in Southern Africa,” the Finnish foreign ministry said. It said that although efforts at building public policies and resilient innovation systems were ongoing, they were often hampered by “modest funding, weak skills and lack of co-ordination and linkages between innovation agents”. SAIS was initiated in 2011 to tackle these challenges and to enhance innovation co-operation in the Southern African Development Community region, said the ministry. — Business Day.

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