Kilifi LPG plant receives maiden consignment
National
By
Joackim Bwana
| Jun 05, 2025
The Sh8 billion Liquefied Petroleum Gas (LPG) storage facility in Kilifi County on Wednesday received its first shipment of cooking gas amid growing safety concerns over the project.
Lake Gas, the operator of the plant, received the maiden consignment of 11,474 metric tonnes of LPG from Nigeria at its Vipingo terminal.
The project has faced several hurdles, with both the community and the Kilifi County Government citing the firm’s failure to follow rules during the plant’s development phase.
Environmentalists also say key safety components, including breakwater protections and proper discharge jetties, remain missing or untested.
The facility is expected to cushion Kenyans from high gas prices, according to Energy and Petroleum Cabinet Secretary Opiyo Wandayi, who has previously downplayed the safety concerns.
READ MORE
From looting to grounded fleet and leasing; inside KQ's turbulence
ICPAK questions Sh34 Safaricom share price in State divestiture plan
East or West? Kenya insists China trade deal on track amid US tensions
Construction costs rise 20pc on skyrocketing cement prices
Oil marketers join forces to drive up autogas adoption
New KMA directive on seafarer training gets industry backing
Funding woes scuttle key Seafarers Council's work
Developers condemn reports that most city buildings are unsafe
Win for Kenya as AGOA agreement extended for 3 years
How Kenya can turn technological progress into real development
Lake Gas Ltd Group Chief Executive and Chairman Ally Awadh said the successful discharge of LPG marks a critical milestone in Kenya’s energy infrastructure development.
Mr Awadh said the consignment will enhance LPG handling capacity, strengthen energy security and accelerate the shift to cleaner energy across the region.
“The commencement of discharge at our Vipingo terminal is a defining moment not just for Lake Gas Limited but for Kenya’s energy landscape. This state-of-the-art facility significantly enhances the country’s LPG import and storage capabilities and reinforces our unwavering commitment to clean energy and national development,” he said.
Mr Awadh said the operations, which began on June 2, 2025 and concluded on June 4, 2025, involved the safe and efficient discharge of 11,475 metric tonnes of LPG via their offshore Conventional Buoy (CBM) system located one kilometre off the Vipingo Coast.
He said the commissioning process of the sh.8 billion facility tested and validated the entire LPG supply chain, including vessel mooring, subsea pipeline transfer and onshore storage system.
“The successful commencement and completion of the commissioning cargo discharge from MT Barumk Gas at Lake Gas Vipingo LPG Terminal marks a landmark in operationalising Kenya’s most advanced LPG import and storage facility with 10,000 metric tonnes,” said Mr Awadh. The CEO said all activities were conducted in full compliance with international safety standards, environmental protection protocols and national regulatory frameworks.