President Uhuru Kenyatta views a model of houses to be constructed at
Park Road Estate in Ngara under the affordable housing Pillar of the Big
4 Agenda. FILE PHOTO | NMG
Summary
- The government had initially said it was ring-fencing 69 items out of those being used in the construction of the housing estates for SMES, but said on November 26 that it had for now secured the building of doors and windows for the Jua Kali industry.
- It was not clear from the government pronouncement whether it would at a later stage include the other 67 items on the list as mandatory components to be supplied by SMEs.
- Other items are supplied by the foreign investors and contractors implementing the projects.
The government has announced that it has set aside a Sh3 billion
procurement order for the informal sector to produce 100,000 doors and
120,000 windows as local content providers for the affordable housing
programme.
A multi-agency committee on integration of
MSMEs (micro, small and medium enterprises) in the affordable housing
programme led by the National Construction Authority will also provide
30 percent advance payment to successful bidders from the Jua Kali
sector in capital facilitation to enable them start on the orders.
The
government had initially said it was ring-fencing 69 items out of those
being used in the construction of the housing estates for SMES, but
said on November 26 that it had for now secured the building of doors
and windows for the Jua Kali industry.
It was not clear
from the government pronouncement whether it would at a later stage
include the other 67 items on the list as mandatory components to be
supplied by SMEs. Other items are supplied by the foreign investors and
contractors implementing the projects.
Housing
Principal Secretary, Charles Hinga, urged artisans gathered in Nairobi
from across the country to work within their associations to access
opportunities as suppliers for doors and windows for the projects in
Nairobi’s upcoming Starehe and Shauri Moyo estates. The project is part
of the government’s plan to inject stimulus to the economy.
The PS was speaking during the opening of a sensitisation drive
for SMEs and Jua Kali enterprises in Nairobi on November 26 during which
the government launched the Jua Kali Production Manual containing
specifications, measurements and standards for the production of the 69
items. The Jua Kali industry will have to abide by this manual when
supplying the items.
“We know you know how to make
doors and windows. We are just giving you a manual specifying the
standards required and access to the market to enable you contribute in
building our country and to also create employment,” he said.
“We
have ring-fenced 69 items which must be supplied by our Jua Kali
sector. To enable funding, a multi-agency committee led by the National
Construction Authority (NCA) will provide the players with 30 percent
advance payment upon the successful bidding process.”
He
however warned, “We’ll expect very high standards when you produce
these items. So don’t think you’ll do some sub-standard doors and we’re
compelled to take them just because it is a government project.”
The
government plans to construct 500,000 units of houses which are planned
for completion by 2022 under the affordable housing scheme that seeks
to plug the gap in provision of decent homes in the country.
The
Jua Kali sector is a big contributor to employment in Kenya, creating
17.8 million jobs in 2018, according to the 2019 Economic Survey by the
Kenya National Bureau of Statistics. The informal jobs constituted 83.6
percent of total employment.
It is hoped that by
clinching the doors and windows contract, the SMEs will contribute in
the realisation of affordable housing, a pillar of the government’s Big 4
Agenda, while creating employment.
Industrialisation
PS, Dr Francis Owino told Enterprise that the government would inject
more resources into upskilling artisans for them to have the requisite
capacity in making the items required by the housing project.
“The
informal sector has the greatest potential to enable the realisation of
the Big 4 Agenda and economic growth as they are critical players in
production of construction sector materials and components, and are a
key contributor in employment creation,” Dr Owino said.
The
ministry in partnership with the State Department for
Industrialisation, State Department of Cooperatives, NCA, Kenya Bureau
of Standards (Kebs), the National Industrial Training Authority (NITA),
State Department of Vocational and Technical Training (TVET), Kenya
National Trading Corporation (KNTC), Kenya Industrial Estates (KIE) and
other agencies will form a network that will facilitate the Jua Kali
sector to manufacture and supply the items allocated to them in the
affordable housing project.
The purpose of the MSME Jua
Kali Production Manual for the components of the affordable
housingprogramme is to provide stakeholders with knowledge on the
standards required to design and manufacture the housing items.
By
standardising the design and production of these items, it will be
possible to utilise Jua Kali artisans while providing them with new
income generation opportunities.
Earlier in the year,
the State Department for Housing and Urban Development contracted three
Nairobi-based Jua Kali associations comprising artisans drawn from Ngong
Road, Kamukunji and Kariobangi (Ngokamka Juakali Group) in the pilot
phase of developing an integration model for MSMEs.
The
group successfully won a contract to supply 8,400 windows and 7,000
doors for the first flagship project under the affordable housing
programme at Park Road, Ngara, where some 228 units were recently
completed in the first phase in which 1,370 units will be built. The
units have utilised doors from the Ngokamka Group.
“The
Jua Kali Production Manual provides guidance on the AHP standards and
aspirations on the quality of the components to be produced by the Jua
Kali sector. It is part of our joint efforts to upskill the players and
improve the quality of their products through recognized quality
assurance methods,” said NCA Executive Director Maurice Akech.
The
Jua Kali Association National Chairman, Richard Muteti, said the sector
must organise itself in order to handle better business by the
government – one of the largest markets they could serve.
He
urged artisans across the country to form groups as it is easier for
the government to transact with associations rather than individual
entrepreneurs.
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