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KENYA: Government relies on PPPs to build 100 water dams in 5 years

©Nataly Reinch/Shutterstock©Nataly Reinch/Shutterstock

This strategy was announced on 20 October 2022 by the President of the Republic of Kenya, William Ruto. This was during the 59th Mashujaa celebration at Uhuru Gardens National Monument and Museum in the capital Nairobi. The Kenyan government wants to build 100 water reservoirs over the next five years.

The water supply project will be open to public-private partnerships (PPPs) in line with the Kenyan government’s policy to increase the supply of clean water to the population in order to achieve universal coverage by 2030. By 2021, Kenyan authorities estimate that 70% of the population in the East African country will have access to safe drinking water.

Irrigating 566,560 hectares of land in Kenya

The construction of new dams in Kenya will also improve the supply of irrigation water at a time when the country is in the grip of a drought. Through this project, “it will be possible to irrigate 566,560 hectares of land identified as irrigable in Kenya, increasing the country’s irrigated land area to more than 1.2 million hectares,” says Kenyan President William Ruto.

According to the nature of the project, 80,937 hectares of irrigated land will be used for rice cultivation, including Bunyala in the Tana Delta, Rahona in Garissa County, Mwea in Kirinyaga County and Ahero in Kisumu County. Approximately 202,343 hectares of irrigated land will be devoted to food crops.

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Until the 100-dam project in Kenya is implemented, people will be content with the existing infrastructure for water supply. The new Thiba irrigation dam benefits 5,000 farming households. At the dam’s inauguration ceremony on October 15, 2022, William Ruto, President of the Republic of Kenya, said it would “increase rice production by 86,000 tonnes per annum from 10 billion Kenyan shillings (about $82.6 million) to 18 billion Kenyan shillings (about $149 million).

Inès Magoum

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