Ground-breaking has taken place at the Menengai Geothermal Power Plant, one of the six green investment projects – worth KES 500bn (US$4.5bn) – that were fast-tracked by President Ruto and Prime Minister Sunak at the COP27 climate summit
The project will be led by Globeleq, a UK company backed by British International Investment.
The geothermal plant will generate 35MW of electricity, providing 750,000 Kenyans with affordable, clean energy.
During construction, it is expected the project will create approximately 200 job opportunities for Kenyan workers. Upon operation, it will provide jobs for 35 to 40 permanent staff and contractors.
This makes it the second project to have construction commence. Exactly one month after the COP27 summit in Egypt, construction began at Nairobi Railway City - a green rail-centred urban regeneration project in central Nairobi.
These investments are flagship projects of the UK-Kenya strategic partnership – an ambitious five-year agreement which is unlocking mutual benefits for the UK and Kenya.
At the UK-hosted G7 in Carbis Bay two years ago, world leaders committed to build a new global partnership for Infrastructure. These projects are examples of predictable, transparent and reliable investments by the UK, which do not load Kenya with unsustainable debt.
UK high commissioner to Kenya Jane Marriott, said, "This shows that the UK and Kenya go far when we go together – delivering mutual benefits for both our countries. This plant will both advance Kenya’s global leadership on climate change, and bring down the cost of power – showing that green growth is good for business, and good for Kenyans."