Nakuru
Menengai · Suswa · Longonot · Population 2,162,202 · 67% electricity access
Geothermal licences in Nakuru
What the strategy proposes for Nakuru
These are the draft strategy provisions that directly affect your county, explained in plain language.
Licensing reform
§4.1The strategy proposes a new licensing framework with stricter milestone enforcement and automatic revocation for dormant licences.
Companies sitting on dormant licences in your county could lose them. This opens the door to new developers who will actually drill and create local jobs.
Steam tariff structure
§4.2The strategy targets a tariff cap of USD 0.07/kWh to make Kenya competitive for geothermal investment.
Lower tariffs could reduce electricity costs for businesses and households near geothermal plants. But without a community benefit clause, savings go to investors, not local residents.
Land acquisition process
§5.1The strategy acknowledges slow land acquisition and compensation processes as a key weakness and proposes streamlining them.
Streamlining land acquisition can mean faster displacement without adequate community consultation. The strategy must include Free, Prior and Informed Consent (FPIC) as required by the Constitution of Kenya.
Direct use and industrial parks
§5.3The strategy proposes co-locating industrial parks and agro-processing facilities near geothermal fields in the central rift to diversify revenue.
Industrial parks near your county's geothermal fields could create thousands of local jobs — but only if local content requirements are enforced, meaning residents get first consideration for employment.
Environmental monitoring
§6.1The strategy proposes compliance with NEMA environmental regulations for all geothermal developments.
The strategy does not include independent H2S monitoring near communities. Currently all emissions data comes from plant operators themselves, not independent third parties. This needs to change.
Community benefit sharing
§7.2The strategy proposes that geothermal development should benefit local communities through employment and infrastructure development.
The strategy is vague on benefit-sharing. It does not specify what percentage of revenue must go to county governments or affected communities. This gap needs to be addressed with specific numbers and enforcement mechanisms.
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- —land displacement
- —H2S emissions
- —employment