Kenya secures Sh22b to boost EV manufacturing, cut power costs

Business
By Mike Kihaki | Aug 21, 2025
President William Ruto and Prime CS Musalia Mudavadi lead a bilateral meeting with with Dr Tanaka Akihiko, President of the Japan International Cooperation Agency in Tokyo, Japan. [@MusaliaMudavadi, X]

Kenya has signed a landmark Statement of Intent with Japan for a 25 billion Yen (Sh22 billion) Samurai financing facility that will accelerate local vehicle manufacturing and lower electricity costs for consumers.

The agreement was sealed on Thursday on the sidelines of the Ninth Tokyo International Conference on African Development (TICAD 9) in Yokohama, Japan, in a ceremony witnessed by President William Ruto and Japanese Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba.

Prime Cabinet Secretary and Foreign Affairs Cabinet Secretary Musalia Mudavadi signed the deal on behalf of Kenya, while Mr Atsuo Kuroda, Chairman and CEO of Nippon Export and Investment Insurance (NEXI), represented Japan.

“This unique Samurai financing facility will promote our transformative program to stimulate the entire automotive value chain, foster linkages with other sectors and promote innovation, research and development,” Mudavadi said.

He added that the facility would also strengthen Kenya’s energy sector by cutting transmission and distribution losses, which currently average 23 percent of national output. “It will further improve access to affordable, reliable power by reducing losses in electricity transmission and distribution,” Mudavadi noted.

Under the financing structure, the Ministry of Investment, Trade and Industry will receive 15 billion Yen (Sh13.1 billion) to support local vehicle assemblers and parts manufacturers, scale up electric vehicle production, and reduce importation of used cars and spares.

The package also includes technical education and training to prepare Kenyan youth for jobs in the emerging green automotive industry.

The Ministry of Energy will access 5.5 billion Yen (Sh4.8 billion) to purchase and install high-efficiency transformers, addressing power system inefficiencies and cutting consumer bills.

The remaining 4.5 billion Yen (Sh3.9 billion) will support general government expenditure to ease fiscal pressures.

Mudavadi hailed Japan’s support, saying the partnership aligns with Kenya’s Bottom-Up Economic Transformation Agenda.

“This facility demonstrates our proactive approach to diversifying funding sources and reducing reliance on traditional borrowing channels,” he said.

The Samurai facility carries a seven-year maturity period and is expected to help Kenya reposition itself as a hub for clean mobility and affordable energy in the region.

Share this story
KTDA appoints Francis Miano acting CEO
KTDA appoints Eng Francis Miano as acting Chief Executive Officer effective January 16, replacing Wilson Muthaura, who proceeds on terminal leave.
Trump tariff threat casts long shadow over Kenya-Iran trade
Countries conducting business with the Islamic Republic risk being slapped with a 25 per cent tariff.
World Bank unlocks Sh5.5b green fund for local SMEs
The funds are available to entrepreneurs in electric mobility and transport, energy-efficient and green buildings, sustainable agriculture, and waste management solutions.
How KQ's fortunes sank
At the heart of Captain Mabura's “Phoenix Plan” is diversifying revenue streams by transforming KQ from a basic airline to an aviation industrial hub through partnerships with US industry giants.
Kenya secures landmark zero-duty trade deal with China
The government has confirmed that it has secured a preliminary trade agreement with China that will allow 98.2 per cent of its goods to enter the Chinese market duty-free.
.
RECOMMENDED NEWS