Ruto admits Kenya now on power rationing, says Ksh.1.2 trillion needed to meet demand
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President William Ruto now says
the government has been forced into daily load-shedding, shutting off some
parts of the country from power supply between 5pm and 10pm, to keep the
national grid stable and cope with the growing power demand.
The President, who addressed
Kenyans living in Doha, Qatar, on Tuesday night, said the country needed over
Ksh.1 trillion to boost its power capacity to at least 5,000 megawatts to spur
growth.
“Today in Kenya, between 5pm and
10pm, we have to do load-shedding. We have to shut off some areas to power
other areas because our energy is insufficient. One data center requires 1,000
megawatts, but we only have 2,300 megawatts,” said President Ruto.
The President explained the plan
to ramp up power production to meet the growing domestic and industrial needs,
now standing at 3,158 megawatts at peak hours.
“If we have to industrialize and
engage in manufacturing, we need a minimum of 10,000 megawatts of energy. We
need to build at least 50 mega dams: High Grand Falls Dam, Soin Koru Dam,” said
Ruto.
The Head of State hinted at
possible ways of raising the more than Ksh.1 trillion budget required to fund
the project.
“We need Ksh.1.2 trillion, that
is just about maybe 10 to 12 billion dollars. We can raise that money. Si
tumeraise hii ya affordable housing? Ksh.600 billion. We have raised it. But
this one, we can raise it even without any levy, tutatumia akili tu,” said
President Ruto.
Kenya’s power supplier, Kenya
Power, has backed the President’s position, saying the grid has in recent days
been overwhelmed, especially after sunset when solar power is lost and the
national grid experiences a drop in supply from existing wind-power producers.
Without giving a specific time
when the load-shedding began, Kenya Power, which has about 10 million
customers, said the downtime at night has led to scheduled rationing.
“Kenya’s appetite for electricity
has reached a new high, reporting a peak demand of 2,411.98MW and the
highest-ever daily energy consumption of 44,122.60MWh recorded on October 24,
2025,” said KenGen.
“No load-shedding was reported
across the national grid during the record-breaking demand period,” added KenGen.


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