
Egypt Brings 10 Tech Startups to Tokyo Innovation Summit
Egypt debuted its first national tech pavilion at a major Tokyo innovation event, connecting 10 homegrown startups with Japanese investors. The move signals Egypt's growing role as a technology hub bridging Africa, the Middle East, and Asian markets.
Ten Egyptian tech startups just took center stage at one of Asia's biggest innovation events, marking their country's first official pavilion at SusHi Tech Tokyo 2026.
The April showcase brought Egypt's Information Technology Industry Development Agency and the Japan International Cooperation Agency together to launch Egyptian entrepreneurs into Japanese markets. Tokyo's Governor Yuriko Koike and Egypt's Ambassador to Japan visited the pavilion, underscoring the partnership's significance.
The startups span solutions people need daily. Breadfast delivers groceries through a quick-commerce network. Chefaa uses AI to connect patients with pharmacies and medications. Trella links truck owners with shippers through a digital logistics platform. NoorNation brings solar energy and water solutions to farms across the region.
Other participating companies tackle healthcare imaging, medical supply chains, cybersecurity threats, car maintenance, and manufacturing optimization. Each startup cleared a rigorous selection process judged by Egyptian officials and Japanese venture capital firms based on growth potential and market fit.
The delegation isn't just there to display innovation. Egyptian founders are sitting down with Japanese investors, venture capital firms, and financial institutions in structured meetings designed to forge lasting business partnerships. These connections could unlock funding and market access that accelerates growth beyond what any single company could achieve alone.

The Ripple Effect
Egypt's startup scene has grown dramatically over the past five years. The country now hosts over 1,500 active startups that raised $2.1 billion in venture funding between 2020 and 2025. More than 50 companies successfully exited during that period, generating $7.4 billion in total exit value.
A new report released during the Tokyo event by Startup Genome highlights Egypt's emerging strengths in deep tech, fintech, semiconductors, and Arabic-language artificial intelligence. The country's large pool of STEM graduates gives it a competitive edge, while lower operating costs make it attractive for startups eyeing regional expansion into Gulf states and African markets.
The Japan partnership, called Project NINJA (Next Innovation with Japan), aims to connect Egyptian startups with global innovation networks systematically. Rather than one-off events, the program creates ongoing pathways for Egyptian entrepreneurs to access high-quality investment opportunities and international partnerships.
Ahmed Elzaher, CEO of Egypt's tech development agency, called the Tokyo debut "a significant step in expanding Egyptian startups' access to Asian markets." Japan represents one of the world's most advanced and valuable tech markets, offering Egyptian companies both capital and expertise.
This first pavilion plants a flag for Egypt's ambitions as a technology exporter and regional innovation hub connecting three continents.
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Based on reporting by Google News - Egypt Innovation
This story was written by BrightWire based on verified news reports.
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