By JOINT REPORT The EastAfrican
In Summary
- The government has approved 56 projects for the PPP initiative, while eight more are awaiting Cabinet approval before they are opened up to investors.
- The government is struggling to maintain its infrastructure upgrading and expansion programme amid spending pressures occasioned by devolution and growing wage demands from the country’s public sector.
- Over the next five years, the country intends to spend over $40 billion — or three times its annual budget — in building new infrastructure and upgrading existing facilities, with investment in energy and transport expected to take up the bulk of the projected spending.
Kenya is banking on private investors to finance
a number of ambitious infrastructure projects in the next five years. A
Public-Private Partnership (PPP) Unit has been created at the Treasury
to source financing for the projects.
The PPP Unit’s director, Stanley Kamau, said it
will be floating tenders to attract private money to fund key projects,
among them the proposed Lamu Port South Sudan Ethiopia Transport
(Lapsset) corridor, as well as roads, power plants and university
hostels.
The government has approved 56 projects for the
PPP initiative, while eight more are awaiting Cabinet approval before
they are opened up to investors.
“We are receiving a lot of interest from private
sector players in some of these projects. We hope to put most of them on
the market by the end of this year. Some, for coal and geothermal, have
already been tendered,” said Mr Kamau.
The African Development Bank (AfDB) says that,
even though 27 per cent of Kenya’s budget has been allocated to
transport, energy, water and sanitation, and environment-related
projects in the past five years, the country’s infrastructure needs are
still far from being adequately addressed.
AfDB says that, of the country’s 160,886km road
network, only 7 per cent is paved, putting the total length of paved
roads per 10,000 inhabitants in Kenya at 2.19km, which is less than the
EAC member countries’ average of 2.53km.
Again, despite the massive investments in power, fewer than 20 per cent of Kenyans are connected to the national grid.
The government is struggling to maintain its
infrastructure upgrading and expansion programme amid spending pressures
occasioned by devolution and growing wage demands from the country’s
public sector.
The budget is further constrained by the
relatively high debt-to-GDP ratio which stands at about 52 per cent.
This is well above the IMF recommended threshold of 50 per cent for
countries at Kenya’s development level.
“There has been a significant increase in large
infrastructure projects for most of East Africa. Due to the huge capital
investment, there is a need for private financing. The government by
itself cannot come up with the large-scale investment that is needed in
our ports, rail and pipeline projects,” said Mark Smith, head of capital
projects at Deloitte East Africa.
Over the next five years, the country intends to
spend over $40 billion — or three times its annual budget — in building
new infrastructure and upgrading existing facilities, with investment in
energy and transport expected to take up the bulk of the projected
spending.
The government estimates that the country has an
annual infrastructure financing gap of $4 billion and growing. In the
next 40 months, the Energy Ministry estimates the country will need at
least $18 billion to generate 5,000MW to meet projected demand.
KenGen plans to invest $4.5 billion in building
and expanding power plants in the next five years, while Kenya Power
says it will spend $2 billion on expanding distribution lines.
To sweeten the deal for private investors in the
sector, the government has signed undertakings guaranteeing a market for
the power developed by these investors.
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