At the heart of this success lies anticipatory and ambitious digital infrastructure investment. The island’s main telecom operator, Mauritius Telecom, deployed fiber networks, submarine cables, and data centers well before local demand required it. Key submarine cable projects include SAFE (2002), LION (2009), METISS (2021), and T3 (2023), collectively offering 72 terabits per second far exceeding the needs of a population of 1.3 million.
The upcoming T4 cable, costing $150-200 million and connecting Mauritius to India and Singapore, exemplifies this strategy: replacing aging infrastructure while preparing for future regional and global demand. These projects are part of a $434 million, three-year roadmap that also covers expanded fiber coverage, advanced 5G networks, AI GPU clusters, and Tier IV data center development.
Mauritius’s leadership is not solely about infrastructure. In May 2025, the government launched “A Blueprint for Mauritius: A Bridge to the Future”, a national digital transformation strategy developed with UNDP Mauritius. Unlike many aspirational plans, the Blueprint is operational, clearly assigning responsibility to agencies: the Digital Transformation Bureau for e-government, the National Computer Board for cybersecurity, and the Data Management Office for citizen data.
The strategy rests on four pillars: cutting-edge infrastructure, human capital development, promotion of innovation and private sector growth, and building a sustainable, inclusive digital future. A Public–Private–and–People Partnership model ensures that even Rodrigues Island, historically underserved, benefits from digital inclusion.
Human capital: the core of success and measurable success
Mauritius’s digital success relies on decades of investment in human capital. Revenues from sugar and textiles in the 1970s and 1980s were deliberately invested in education and healthcare, creating a highly literate workforce capable of adapting to new industries. When the island transitioned to finance, tourism, and eventually technology, workers were already ready.
Today, government programs, universities, and private coding bootcamps continue to train experts in AI, cybersecurity, and data analysis. Mauritius Telecom explicitly integrates talent development into its strategy, aiming to position the island as both a consumer and producer of advanced digital capabilities for the region.
Mauritius ranks third in Africa for ICT development in the ITU 2025 rankings, with a score of 86.3 and a Tier 1 cybersecurity classification. Fiber and 5G networks cover major urban centers and business districts, supporting fintech, cloud computing, and AI applications. Internet costs can be prohibitive for lower-income households, fixed broadband access is urban-centric, and government e-services sometimes lack interoperability. Local innovation is growing but still lags behind the island’s advanced infrastructure and regional connectivity.
Mauritius shows that a small market can become a continental digital hub through forward-looking infrastructure, institutional alignment, human capital development, and inclusive policy. Its experience demonstrates that infrastructure alone is not enough; success depends on the coherence of policy, planning, and workforce readiness. For other African nations, the takeaway is clear: investing in technology is necessary, but aligning infrastructure, skills, and institutions is what turns strategy into sustainable, tangible results.

