Sustainability of livelihoods, businesses, jobs and cities has
become a major talking point in today’s world in which disruption is the
norm
By NGÁNGÁ MBUGUA
By NGÁNGÁ MBUGUA
As a result, companies, individuals and policy
makers must constantly seek ways to adapt, first to
remain profitable and secondly to remain relevant.
remain profitable and secondly to remain relevant.
In cities like
Nairobi, public planning has over the years been marred by a lack of
long-term planning, leading to such public infrastructure challenges as
the privatisation of public transport, perennial water shortages, power
outages and failure to plan roads correctly to take into account the
safety of all road users.
For instance, failure to plan roads properly has led to a disproportionate number of pedestrian deaths.
But
these pedestrians are not just numbers; they are workers, breadwinners,
consumers and an integral part of the city and no less valuable than
the motorists for whom highways and bypasses are regularly expanded.
It remains a conundrum that cities like Kisumu, which sit next
to a fresh water lake fed by numerous rivers, continues to experience
water shortages. How can such challenges be addressed in a region that
is no stranger to flooding?
These are some of the questions that the next edition of The Edge, to be published on June 12, will be seeking to answer.
The
Business Daily has put together a team of thought leaders, opinion and
policy shapers, business actors and journalists to explore ways in which
lives, livelihoods, businesses and cities can be made more sustainable
and resilient while also raising the quality of life across
demographics.
Do not miss your copy on Friday, June 12
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