The African Private Capital Association announced Lagos as the host city for the AVCA Annual Conference and Venture Capital Summit in 2025.

After 10 years, Africa’s largest private capital gathering will return to the region’s largest economy, Nigeria.

This follows the successful AVCA Conference and VC summit held in Johannesburg last week, which attracted 700+ delegates from more than 60 countries.
More than 300 delegates attended the 3rd Annual VC Summit where panellists took stock of the global decline of VC funding and explored a range of solutions to catalyse growth.

Speakers marked the influence of rapidly emerging technologies shaping African innovation and driving the digital economy, creating new skills and increasing efficiency, such as artificial intelligence, blockchain and quantum computing.

Speaking on the panel, ‘The Deep-Tech Potential in African Tech’, Andre Jr. Ayotte, Partner, Modus Capital, highlighted how founders can apply technology to build companies solving problems at scale.

Despite progress in tech-enabled sectors, Nick Allen, Managing Partner, Savant, noted that gaps in Africa’s tertiary education system have led to a lack of skilled graduates with sufficient engineering knowledge.

He added that in comparison to more developed markets such as Europe and the US, there is a lack of investors who understand how to finance deep tech in Africa.

Speaking during the panel, ‘Seasons Change: Lessons Learned in Winter and the Path to Spring’, panellists took stock of the global decline of funding within the VC ecosystem.

Seasoned investor, Khaled Ben Jilani, Senior Partner, AfricInvest, raised the importance of active strategies to make businesses less capital intensive in order to anticipate new risks and navigate a lack of liquidity in the market. Steve Beck, Co-Found Ventures, expressed that private eqer and Managing Partner, Novastar uity firms and development finance institutions (DFIs) with dedicated VC teams had stepped in to partially fill the funding gaps, particularly in the early stages.

Other panel highlights included ‘Catwalks, Canvases, & Choruses: Sector Spotlight on the Creative Industry’, ‘Debt Dynamics: Unlocking Liquidity with Venture Debt in Africa’,‘Green Ventures: VC for Climate’, ‘Founders First: Building a Platform for Success in African’ and ‘The Real Deal” – Venture Capital in the Real Economy’.

The VC summit saw participation from Africa-focussed venture capital funds, DFIs and global investors including AfricInvest, African Renaissance Partners, Aves Lair, Altree Capital, Breega, Enza Capital, European Investment Bank (EIB), Flat6Labs, LoftyInc Capital, Lightship Anchor Fund, Octerra Capital, Proparco, Savant, Sango Capital, Sawari Ventures, Standard Bank, TL Com Capital, USAID Prosper Africa, Ventures Platform, 500 Global, and more.

Looking ahead, Nigeria’s position at the forefront of venture capital and private equity investment in Africa, backed up by a tech-savvy population and the recent rise in local investment funds and angel investors, sets the scene for a dynamic summit in 2025.