In Africa, electricity is not just a commodity; it is the artery through which modern life flows. Yet, in 2023, Kenya sits at a mere 76.2% electricity access, a glaring underachievement for a nation that prides itself as East Africa’s economic hub. Meanwhile, six African countries bask in the glow of 100% electrification.

The 100% Club—Algeria, Egypt, Tunisia, Morocco, Mauritius, and Seychelles—reads like a masterclass in planning, investment, and execution. Four of these are from North Africa, where strategic state-led infrastructure development has left no home in the dark.

What is striking is not just that Kenya is absent from this list, but that it is trailing nations with far fewer resources and smaller economies. In a continent where over 600 million people live without power, being at 76.2% is not a badge of progress; it is an indictment.

North Africa’s success is built on clear policy, stable long-term planning, and ruthless implementation. Governments there treat electricity as a public good and national security asset, not a revenue-extraction machine for political cronies.

Mauritius and Seychelles, despite their small size, have leveraged renewables, efficient grid management, and private-public partnerships to achieve universal coverage. Kenya, on the other hand, seems to confuse ribbon-cutting ceremonies with actual power delivery.

In the 1880s, Lagos and Addis Ababa lit up government buildings before Kenya even existed as a colony. South Africa electrified Kimberley in 1882. Yet here we are in 2023, discussing why rural Kenyan homes still rely on smoky kerosene lamps.

Affordable power in Kenya remains elusive. Tariffs are punitive, system losses hover around 23%, and generation costs are inflated by opaque IPP contracts. The poor pay dearly in both money and opportunity.

Reports show Kenya Power’s inefficiencies are legendary. Theft, corruption, and outdated infrastructure form a perfect storm of darkness. Even when connections are made, reliability is a national joke.

The current government promised to connect every home by 2022, but deadlines were missed, targets quietly revised, and excuses rehearsed like a tired political play. It is incompetence, yes—but also arrogance.

Our leadership seems oblivious to the fact that electricity access fuels GDP growth, health outcomes, and education. Instead, they obsess over photo-ops at new substations while ignoring villages that have never seen a light bulb.

Comparing Kenya to the 100% Club is not just an exercise in shame—it is a mirror. Where they invested in renewable integration, we invested in inflated diesel generation contracts.

Where they enforced strict utility governance, we appointed boards based on loyalty, not skill. Where they planned for decades, we planned until the next election cycle.

The incompetence is not accidental. It thrives in a system where power projects are cash cows for the politically connected. Reliable, cheap electricity would cut the gravy train’s fuel supply.

Even our electrification programs often prioritize politically aligned regions. It is not about where the need is greatest; it is about where the votes are safest.

The tragedy is that Kenya should lead Africa in this metric. We have geothermal resources envied by the world, abundant wind and solar potential, and a strategic location for energy trade.

Instead, geothermal sits underutilized, wind projects are stalled by land disputes, and solar is treated as a side project for donors. We are rich in potential and bankrupt in execution.

The World Bank’s reports are clear: with proper policy and investment discipline, Kenya could have joined the 100% Club years ago. Yet we prefer the club of missed opportunities.

North African states understood that electrification is the foundation of industrial growth. Kenya treats it as a side hustle. The result? We import finished goods from countries with fewer natural advantages.

Businesses suffer power outages that force them into costly generator use, eroding competitiveness. Investors take note, and capital flows elsewhere.

The irony is painful. We lecture the region on our innovation prowess while failing to provide the very infrastructure that innovation depends on.

Energy poverty perpetuates income poverty. Children study under dim light, health clinics operate in darkness, and small-scale manufacturers fold under high costs.

Our energy policies read like wish lists, not roadmaps. They are heavy on


Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *