Government presses China to unlock stalled projects

Business
By Brian Ngugi | Oct 01, 2025
Prime Cabinet Secretary in the Executive Office of the President of the Republic of Kenya   Musalia Mudavadi  During the occasion of Bastille Day. [File, Standard]

The cash strapped government of President William Ruto is racing to secure Chinese financing to extend the Standard Gauge Railway (SGR) from Naivasha to the Ugandan border and to build the Rironi-Mau Summit dual carriageway, projects seen as vital to unlocking Western Kenya’s economy, before the 2027 election deadline.

Prime Cabinet Secretary Musalia Mudavadi said the government is in advanced talks with Chinese firms to unlock the mega infrastructure projects along the western corridor stating the goal is to “enhance the efficiency of trade” with Uganda and the Great Lakes region.

The renewed government effort comes after earlier plans to extend the railway hit a snag when the China Export-Import Bank halted further funding for the SGR extension estimated to cost nearly Sh500 billion, despite having bankrolled the initial Sh327 billion line from Mombasa to Naivasha. 

To break the impasse, the Ruto-led administration has reportedly proposed a new financing structure  where it would fund 30 per cent of the project. Mudavadi indicated there is also an urgency to build the 175-kilometre Rironi-Mau Summit road, a notorious bottleneck where travel can take over seven hours during peak travel times like Christmas.

In April 2024, the government cancelled a Sh190 billion deal to expand the Nairobi Nakuru Highway with a French consortium and is now seeking Chinese contractors.

Mudavadi confirmed the advanced negotiations at a reception in Nairobi marking the 76th anniversary of the founding of the People’s Republic of China.

“We wish to pursue some critical aspects where we want to extend the SGR from Naivasha all the way to Kisumu, Malaba border, so that we can enhance the efficiency of trade between us... and indeed, the Great Lakes region,” said Mudavadi. 

He added “We are also in consultation so that we can have the dual carriageway of the Rironi-Mau Summit  road so that all these again can enhance our trade arrangements with our partners and in the region.”

An earlier Kenya Association of Manufacturers (KAM) study found that businesses prefer trucks due to the railway’s high cost and lack of “last-mile” connectivity from its terminus in Naivasha, where a planned industrial park has been slow to materialise.

“The government should review the SGR rates to match road transport,” the KAM study urged, noting that the railway’s inefficiencies force costly final deliveries by truck.

The Ruto administration, reckons the two projects (rail and road) are key in facilitating trade for landlocked neighbours like Uganda, Rwanda, and DR Congo.

The public’s patience on the delayed projects has however been wearing thin. “We don’t care if the Chinese or the French build it,” said truck driver John Ochieng in Naivasha. “We just need a road.”

Share this story
ICPAK questions Sh34 Safaricom share price in State divestiture plan
ICPAK has raised concerns over the government’s plan to sell a 15 per cent stake in Safaricom to Vodacom at Sh34 per share, questioning the valuation methodology and long-term fiscal impact.
From looting to grounded fleet and leasing; inside KQ's turbulence
Aircraft sent for routine maintenance are taking longer to return to service, delayed by shortages of critical spare parts.
Oil marketers join forces to drive up autogas adoption
Oil marketing firm Ola Energy and LPG firm Proto Energy have unveiled a joint initiative to roll out autogas refilling points across Ola’s retail network across the country.
East or West? Kenya insists China trade deal on track amid US tensions
The government now says a landmark trade agreement with China remains on track, dismissing concerns that geopolitical tensions with the US have stalled the long-delayed deal.
Construction costs rise 20pc on skyrocketing cement prices
The stability of the shilling, while advantageous to the sector, has not been of much relief to cushion the increasing cost of construction.
.
RECOMMENDED NEWS