
Degas Ltd announces $100m investment to make Ghana an AI-powered agric hub
5 mins read
22nd August 2025 8:38:56 AM
5 mins readBy: Andy Ogbarmey-Tettey
Chief Executive Officer (CEO) and Founder of Degas Limited, a Japanese business, Doga Makiura, has announced his outfit’s decision to invest $100m over the next four years to aid Ghana in becoming an AI-powered agricultural hub on the continent.
Doga Makiura made this known during a meeting with President John Dramani Mahama on the sidelines of the Ghana Presidential Investment Forum.
“Ghana has shown that when technology meets a clear national vision, smallholder farmers can thrive. Our $100 million commitment will scale AI-driven satellite monitoring and precision agriculture techniques so farmers can boost yields, reduce risk, and access fairly priced finance. We’ve already seen incomes double with a 95% repayment rate from the farmers,” he said.
Mr Makiura revealed that many Japanese partners now consider Ghana’s integrated approach the gold standard for agricultural investment in Africa.
He thus indicated that “President Mahama’s focus on value-chain integration aligns closely with Japan’s search for credible, scalable partnerships.”
On his part, President John Dramani Mahama noted that the investment reinforces the commitment to integrated agricultural value chains that connect farmers to markets, finance, storage, and processing.
“By leveraging AI and precision technologies, we will improve productivity, enhance food security, and create dignified jobs for youth across rural communities,” he added.
In a related event, Deputy Minister for Communication, Digital Technology and Innovations, Mohammed Adam Sukparu, has stated that the future of African business lies in digital trade and innovation.
His comment came while delivering a speech on behalf of the sector Minister at the Africa Business Festival: “The CEO’s Connect Summit,” held in Accra on 21st August, 2025.
“The future of Africa’s business lies not just in its markets, but in its innovation. If we digitize Africa, we globalize Africa,” he strongly stated while reaffirming the Ministry’s unwavering commitment to driving digital transformation across the continent.
Highlighting the summit’s theme, Hon. Sukparu emphasised that digital tools and platforms are no longer optional, but are instead the very foundation of competitiveness, resilience, and global relevance. He said, “under the leadership of His Excellency John Dramani Mahama, Ghana is actively implementing bold policies and investments to establish a digitally enabled economy, ranging from e-governance platforms to digital financial inclusion and broadband expansion into rural communities, ensuring no one is left behind.”
He further stated that the Ministry is dedicated to strengthening support for startups, FinTechs, and entrepreneurs, aiming to solidify Ghana’s position as a hub of business and technology in Africa. The Minister further articulated that the future of African business lies in digital trade and innovation. Through e-commerce and digital platforms, African entrepreneurs can access new markets, scale globally, and transform industries. He stressed the critical need for Africa to move beyond being mere consumers of technology to becoming producers and innovators.
This transformation, he noted, necessitates robust collaboration between governments, the private sector, and academia to build resilient digital economies capable of competing on the global stage. The Minister called upon entrepreneurs to adopt digital tools and platforms as a strategy for growth and competitiveness, and urged investors to deepen partnerships with Africa’s thriving tech ecosystem.
A Ghana Report by PwC has revealed that 59% of Chief Executive Officers (CEOs) in Ghana expect Generative AI to increase their company’s profit in 2025. However, 52% and 49% of CEOs in Africa and globally expect the same.
"Aligned to these three data points representing CEOs’ trust in GenAI’s potential and their elation over early payoffs is CEOs’ confirmation of their readiness to continue to invest in the technology—66% of Ghana’s CEOs confirmed that they would continue to adopt/ embed GenAI across their companies over the next 12 months, i.e., in 2025," the report added.
PwC has been tracking CEOs’ interest in GenAI since the technology appeared on the radar of most executives a couple of years ago. Across Ghana, Africa, and globally, the report noted that CEOs’ interest in and appetite for adopting this new and rapidly evolving technology seems to have soared over a short period.
"In 2023, when we asked CEOs about the extent to which they had adopted GenAI in their businesses, less than a quarter of CEOs (23%) in Ghana affirmed having done so. The proportion was slightly higher for Africa CEOs (26%) and discernibly high at the global level—a third of CEOs (32%)."
The report revealed that CEOs’ responses to a question about what their plans are for the technology in 2025 might, however, suggest a slight softening in their implementation stances for the year. In PwC’s view, “softening” is not to suggest that executive interest in or appetite for the technology is waning. Rather, it is an expression—understandably—of CEOs’ caution following their stocktake of the technology’s performance against their expectations for the prior year. This signalled the need for business leaders to be strategic in their investment appraisals of the technology.
In responding to the survey, PwC noted that CEOs reported that GenAI made appreciable contributions to their companies’ revenue growth and profitability, as well as to operational and employees’ efficiencies. "However, this performance slightly lagged CEO expectations for revenue growth and profitability, in particular," the report added.
An average of 63% of CEOs in Ghana noted they expected the new technology to enhance the time efficiencies of their workforce (including their own efficiency) at work. This matched the average percentage of Africa and global CEOs (61%) who expressed a similar expectation.
"Perhaps, it was this positive sentiment about time efficiencies that led fewer CEOs (10% - 13%) to project workforce increases due to GenAI," the report added. The report found that CEOs in Ghana appear more trustful of GenAI than CEOs in Africa and globally. "45% of them shared that they have a high degree of trust in having AI/ GenAI embedded into key processes in their company. In comparison, 33% and 35% of CEOs globally and in Africa, respectively, expressed similar sentiments of high trust," the report noted.
Govt’s take on AI
Ghana in May launched the National AI Strategy Stakeholder Consultation Forum to highlight the critical importance of the initiative in positioning Ghana within the rapidly evolving global digital landscape.
The Communications Minister, Sam Nartey George, outlined the enormous potential of AI to transform various sectors, including agriculture, healthcare, logistics, smart cities, and financial inclusion.
He, however, stressed the accompanying responsibilities concerning ethics, data privacy, governance, and inclusion, affirming the government’s determination to ensure that no one is left behind. “Artificial Intelligence is no longer a future concept. It is here and it is already reshaping our world,” the Minister stated emphatically.
Under the leadership of H.E. President John Dramani Mahama, the government has set a clear ambition to make Ghana the AI Hub of Africa. This vision is being supported by concrete steps, including the renaming of the Ministry to explicitly include Digital Technologies and Innovation.
IMF’s view
In 2024, the International Monetary Fund (IMF) indicated that the introduction of Artificial Intelligence (AI) will impact 40 percent of the global workforce.
“A recent IMF study shows that artificial intelligence could affect up to 40 percent of jobs across the world and 60 percent in advanced economies. It could enhance workers’ productivity but also threatens some jobs. Investing in digital infrastructure and skills, as well as in strong social safety nets will determine the pace of AI adoption and its impact on productivity.”
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