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How PS Kimotho Is Driving Diplomacy Through the Daua Dam

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Across the Horn of Africa , rivers do not recognise borders. They rise where they can, flow where gravity allows, and sustain whoever lies along their path. Yet the moment those rivers cross into political space, they become something else entirely. They become questions of ownership, access, control, and sometimes tension. For a long time, countries have tried to manage water as though it belongs neatly within their territories. It never has. That mismatch between natural systems and political boundaries has quietly shaped how development unfolds in this region. It has also limited how far individual countries can go on their own. Kenya knows this reality well. So do Ethiopia and Somalia. Each faces growing pressure on water resources, increasing climate variability, and rising demand from populations that depend on agriculture for survival. These pressures do not stop at the border. They move across it. What is beginning to change is how these shared challenges are being approached. ...

Why Ngong Forest Is the Test Case for Kenya’s Forest Revolution

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  Kenya has spent decades trying to protect its forests, often through fragmented efforts that addressed one problem at a time. Tree planting campaigns would come and go. Enforcement would tighten in one season and weaken in another. Communities living around forests were frequently treated as beneficiaries rather than partners. The result has been a pattern that is familiar across the country: progress that is visible, but rarely sustained. A different approach is now taking shape, and it is unfolding within Ngong Forest. What is emerging here is not just another conservation initiative. It is a structured attempt to redesign how forest protection, restoration, and community livelihoods interact. That is why Ngong Forest is quickly becoming the most important test case for what could evolve into Kenya’s next phase of environmental management. More Than a Forest, A System Under Pressure Ngong Forest is not a single block of land. It is a connected ecosystem comprising Oloolua, Kibi...

How 2,800 Runners Will Secure the Future of Oloolua Forest

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  Located in Karen, away from the noise and urgency of Nairobi’s expanding skyline, lies a 618-hectare stretch of indigenous forest that continues to do what it has always done. It breathes life into the city. It supports biodiversity, regulates climate, and sustains water systems that millions depend on daily, often without knowing it. Oloolua Forest is not just a recreational space. It is one of Nairobi’s last remaining natural forests, quietly serving over four million people. Its value is ecological, economic, and deeply human. Yet despite its importance, a critical vulnerability remains. A significant portion of its perimeter, approximately 25 kilometres , is still exposed. Unprotected boundaries are not just a technical issue. They are an open invitation to encroachment, illegal activities, and gradual degradation. Forests rarely disappear overnight. They erode slowly, piece by piece, until one day the loss becomes undeniable. Turning Movement Into Protection Conservation of...

The Story Behind K-RISE: What It Means for Kenya’s Food Future

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  There is a way big national programmes are often communicated that makes them feel distant from everyday life. They arrive wrapped in technical language, structured around policy terms, and explained through frameworks that only a few people fully follow. To most citizens, they sound important, but not immediate. Necessary, but not personal. K-RISE could easily be understood that way. A programme tied to irrigation development, supported by the World Bank , anchored in sector investment plans, and structured around components like Farmer-Led Irrigation Development and water security . On the surface, it reads like another well-designed initiative in a long list of development efforts. But that reading misses something deeper. Because the real story behind K-RISE is not about irrigation as a sector. It is about how Kenya is beginning to confront a problem that has quietly shaped its past and will define its future. Food in Kenya has always depended on rain. That dependency has be...

How Green Connect Foundation Is Redefining Conservation in Kenya

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There is a way environmental work often presents itself to the public. It arrives in numbers, in targets, in carefully worded updates about trees planted, hectares covered, or communities reached. It looks structured and complete on the surface, yet something about it rarely holds long enough to change outcomes in a lasting way. The effort is visible, the intention is clear, but the impact often struggles to outlive the activity. That pattern has become so familiar that many people no longer question it. Conservation is expected to come in cycles. A campaign begins, energy builds, results are announced, and then, gradually, the system returns to where it was before. Not because people do not care, but because the work is rarely designed to hold itself together once attention shifts elsewhere. Somewhere within Kenya’s environmental space, a different approach has been taking shape, not loudly, not with urgency for recognition, but with a certain discipline that suggests long-term thinki...

Gratitude to PS Kimotho for Championing Oloolua Forest, Nairobi’s Green Treasure

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Dear PS CPA Ephantus Kimotho, When you first stepped into the arena of environmental leadership, few outside government circles could have predicted the depth of your commitment to the land, the trees, the people, and the future that hangs beautifully on Kenya’s green horizons. Today, I want to thank you; not for a single event or a moment, but for a pattern of dedication that has brought hope back to Oloolua Forest, our city’s lungs, our natural classroom, and a refuge of both life and memory. There is something deeply human about a forest; a place where soil and sun and water knit themselves into canopy and shade and air we find ourselves breathing a little more easily. For so many of us in Nairobi, Oloolua isn’t just trees and trails; it is heritage. It is history. It is connection to a time before concrete swallowed horizon lines and to a future where nature and city can exist not as rivals but as companions. You know this place well: its ancient paths that echo the footsteps of fr...

What Oloolua CARE Reveals About Kenya’s Irrigation and Climate Financing

There is a quiet shift happening in Kenya’s approach to irrigation , conservation , and climate resilience , and it is becoming visible in places many would not immediately associate with agricultural policy. Oloolua Forest , part of the Ngong Forest ecosystem , has now emerged as one of those places. What may appear at first glance as a conservation effort is, in reality, something deeper. It is a test case for how Kenya could finance and sustain its irrigation and water security agenda going forward. At the center of this shift is the Oloolua CARE Initiative , anchored on six pillars that bring together conservation, livelihoods, clean water, circular economy , clean energy , and climate-smart agriculture . This framework signals a move away from fragmented interventions toward a more integrated and financially conscious model of development. It is not just about planting trees or fencing forests. It is about redefining how natural resources are protected, funded, and linked to eco...