Tech giant Google has announced that will invest $1 billion (Sh110 billion) in Africa’s innovation journey over the next five years.

The company’s chief executive Sundar Pichai said the funds will be utilised to make technology accessible to more users in the continent.

Mr Pichai was speaking during this year’s Google4Africa event held on Wednesday virtually.

“We’ve made huge strides together over the past decade, but there’s more work to do to make the internet accessible, affordable and useful for every African,” he said.

Africa, despite commanding a market of 1.2 billion people, remains at the bottom of the global digital economy value chain due to high cost of mobile and fixed internet as expensive smartphones lockout over half of the population from web services.

Google said the investment will focus to bridge this gap by offering faster internet to more people at lower connectivity costs. A new subsea cable Equiano is planned to run through South Africa, Namibia, Nigeria and St Helena and connect the continent with Europe.

This will add to the already existing 40,000-kilometre 4G and 5G subsea cable by the 2Africa consortium, that connects 19 African countries to Europe and the Middle East.

In efforts to help make smartphones more affordable to Africans, Google has partnered with Safaricom in a device financing plan to make Android devices more accessible.

The company is moving the initiative to partners like Airtel, MTN, Orange, Transsion Holdings and Vodacom to help “millions of first-time smartphone users gain access to quality, affordable Android smartphones.”

The company also announced Plus Codes on Google Maps, a free and open source addressing system to provide online addresses for millions of people without physical addresses. It is already working in the Gambia, but plans are underway to launch it in Kenya, Nigeria and South Africa.