Kenya’s Carbon Trading Landscape
Legal & Regulatory Foundations
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The Climate Change (Amendment) Act, 2023, enacted in September 2023, mandated environmental impact assessments, community development agreements (CDAs), and registration of projects with a National Carbon Registry Bowman LawMondaq.
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Building on this, the Climate Change (Carbon Markets) Regulations, 2024 (effective May 2024) introduced:
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A carbon registry managed by NEMA, the national authority under Article 6 of the Paris Agreement;
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Clear rules for project approval, and differentiated community benefit-sharing: at least 40% of earnings from land-based projects, 25% for non-land-based KilimokwanzaEYMount Kenya Times.
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Market Growth & Activity
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Since 2012, registered carbon projects grew from 8 to 80+ by 2023, generating ~4.5 million credits yearly—valued at around $77 million (nearly 1% of Kenya’s GDP) Mount Kenya Times.
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In June 2023, Kenya hosted the world’s largest carbon market auction, selling over 2.2 million tonnes of credits from sectors like reforestation, renewables, and waste management The Star.
Challenges & Equity Concerns
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Only 38% of Kenya’s carbon projects complete validation due to high transaction costs, complex methodologies, and technical capacity gaps Mount Kenya Times.
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Benefit-sharing remains skewed: indigenous communities often receive less than 20% of project revenues, despite stewarding the land Mount Kenya TimesResearchGate.
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Some projects have overestimated their emissions reductions, undermining credibility and investor confidence Mount Kenya Times.
Innovations & Clean-tech Initiatives
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Octavia Carbon, a Kenyan start-up, is deploying Direct Air Carbon Capture (DACC) using geothermal steam and basalt storage. Its prototypes capture about 10 tonnes CO₂/year (like 1,000 trees). Plans are underway for a 1,000-ton facility, with ~$3 million in carbon credit contracts secured Reuters.
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Koko Networks provides bioethanol cookstoves to Kenyan households. Backed by carbon market revenues and supported by a $179.6 million MIGA guarantee, it’s scaling clean-cooking initiatives and selling credits internationally Wikipedia.
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CO2balance, a UK-based consultancy, operates in Kenya through CarbonZero Kenya Ltd, helping develop carbon projects aligned with the SDGs Wikipedia.
Community Impact & Criticism
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The Northern Kenya Rangelands Carbon Project—backed by Meta, Netflix, and British Airways—has generated ~$90 million in sales. Yet, a Kenyan court recently ruled that two conservancies were unlawfully established; Verra is now reviewing their accreditation The Times.
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Local communities accuse such projects of disrupting traditional lifestyles, restricted land access, and lacking meaningful consent. For example:
“We are pastoralists, we don’t want to be given restrictions that we can’t move with our animals.”

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