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Microsoft, SABC Plus Partner to Expand AI and Digital Skills Training Across South Africa

Collaboration aims to embed AI fluency into everyday learning for millions of South Africans

Telling African Stories One Voice at a time!

Microsoft South Africa and SABC Plus have announced a new collaboration to integrate artificial intelligence (AI) fluency and digital skills training into the SABC Plus platform, marking a major step in expanding access to future-ready skills across the country.

The partnership was unveiled on January 29 at the Microsoft AI Tour in Johannesburg and is being driven by Microsoft Elevate, the company’s skilling and employability initiative. It builds on Microsoft’s 2025 AI Skills Initiative, which committed to training one million South Africans by 2026.

“AI can be a powerful bridge to opportunity. By partnering with SABC, we aim to embed digital and AI skills into the daily lives of millions,” said Tiara Pathon, Microsoft Elevate AI Skills Director for South Africa.

Launched in 2022, SABC Plus is a free-to-air, internet-based streaming platform that provides live television, radio, catch-up programming and on-demand content. With nationwide reach — including rural and underserved communities with limited broadband access — the platform plays a key role in supporting the SABC’s public mandate to educate and empower citizens.

Through this collaboration, SABC Plus will serve as a distribution channel for several Microsoft Elevate programmes, including Ikamva Digital for TVET colleges, ElevateHer for women, Civic AI for non-profit organisations, and the YES 50K Certification Programme aimed at improving youth employability.

The initiative comes amid growing global demand for AI skills, now ranked among the fastest-growing competencies worldwide. In South Africa, AI adoption rose to 21.1 percent in 2025, according to Microsoft’s AI Diffusion Report.

Analysts estimate that AI adoption could drive up to a 50 percent increase in Africa’s GDP by 2030, fueled by productivity gains and the emergence of new industries. A separate study, Africa’s AI Skills Readiness Revealed by SAP, projects that artificial intelligence could add $1.5 trillion to the African economy by 2030 if the continent captures just 10 percent of the global AI market.

Experts say initiatives like Microsoft Elevate are critical to closing the continent’s skills gap, reducing unemployment and creating pathways into high-demand digital and technology-driven sectors.

Telling African Stories One Voice at a time!
Victoria Emeto
the authorVictoria Emeto
A bright and self-driven graduate trainee at AV1 News, she brings fresh energy and curiosity to her role. With a strong academic background in Mass Communication, she has a solid foundation in storytelling, audience engagement, and media ethics. Her passion lies in the evolving media landscape, particularly how emerging technologies are reshaping content creation and distribution. She is already carving a niche for herself as a skilled journalist, honing her reporting, writing, and research abilities through hands-on experience. She actively explores the intersection of digital innovation and traditional journalism.

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