The Pan Afrikanist Watchman
Addis Ababa, 14 July 2026: The African Union (AU) this week hosted the Innovating Education in Africa (IEA) 2026 Expo at its Addis Ababa headquarters, drawing policymakers, innovators, academics and development partners to advance the continent’s digital education agenda.
Held under the theme “Accelerating the Digital Transformation of Education: Scaling Innovative Solutions for the AU Decade of Education and Skills 2025–2034”, the gathering aligns with the Continental Education Strategy for Africa (CESA 2026–2035).

Organised by the AU Commission’s Department of Education, Science, Technology and Innovation, the expo aims to scale innovative solutions that expand access to quality learning, strengthen skills development and prepare Africa’s workforce for the Fourth Industrial Revolution.
More than 300 delegates are attending in person, with hundreds joining virtually. Participants include government officials, EdTech entrepreneurs, universities, TVET institutions, researchers, private sector leaders, and international partners such as UNESCO, UNICEF, the World Bank, AfDB and GIZ.
The expo highlights Africa’s drive to build inclusive, lifelong learning systems that support industrialisation, green growth and emerging technologies. Building on the AU Year of Education (2024) and the launch of the AU Decade of Education and Skills, the focus is now on digitalisation, AI, robotics and innovation ecosystems.
Key priorities include:
- Showcasing more than 20 scalable education innovations.
- Supporting Member States to integrate AI and robotics into national education strategies.
- Strengthening teacher and TVET instructor training in digital pedagogy.
- Linking education to economic development through AfCFTA skills recognition.
- Boosting research commercialisation and innovation incubation via Africa’s Centres of Excellence.
Organisers expect the expo to deliver stronger alignment of national and continental policies, enhanced digital and green skills, and improved industry‑driven education ecosystems. The initiative also seeks to reinforce Africa’s technological and intellectual sovereignty by fostering home‑grown innovation.
Sidebar: 5 Key Takeaways from the AU IEA 2026 Expo
- Scaling Innovation: Over 20 high‑impact education solutions showcased, spanning general education, higher ed, TVET and robotics.
- AI & Robotics Integration: Member States urged to align national strategies with the AU Continental AI Strategy.
- Teacher Training: Strong focus on digital pedagogy, AI literacy and robotics education for instructors.
- Education–Economy Link: Skills recognition under AfCFTA promoted to boost labour mobility and industry‑driven ecosystems.
- Research Commercialisation: Centres of Excellence tasked with driving innovation incubation, IP development and investment readiness.