Nairobi might Finally Be Clean After 18 Overaseas Firms Bid To Build 45 MegaWatt Garbage Powered Power Plant

Quick Figures
Nairobi Generates 3,000 Tonnes of waste per day
Less than half of this is collected.
Power Plant to be designed to process 2,500 tonnes per day.
Soon after completion the Power plant might start importing waste from Kiambu, Thika, Kajiado etc

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Chinese firms dominate the preliminary list of firms angling for a contract to set up a 45 megawatts (MW) garbage-powered electricity plant at the Dandora dumpsite.
Records by the Nairobi County government showed that 18 firms—eight of them Chinese–expressed interest in implementing the project whose feasibility study findings have already been approved.

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The firms eyeing the contract for design, financing, operation, and maintenance of the planned power plant include; M.s Makyol Insaat Sayayi Turizm ve Ticaret A (Turkey), M.s Micropower Corporation and Enercon Energy Consultants Limited (US), M.s Nepra Resource Management PVT Ltd (India), M.s Iron Bridge Africa, and M.s Omnia Distributors Ltd (Kenya).

The Nairobi County government yesterday invited the 18 companies to submit proposals for the project which it said is targeted to process a minimum of 2,500 tonnes of municipal waste per day. The city generates about 3,000 tonnes of garbage per day but estimates show that only about half of it is collected.

Since time ya kibaki… This has been the chorus… #Tuta fanya…
#Tuta jenga…
#Tuta punguza…

[SIZE=7]Why dismantling city ‘garbage cartels’ is an uphill task[/SIZE]
Thursday, March 12, 2020 — updated on June 29, 2020
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Garbage at the Muthurwa Market on March 9, 2020. Despite efforts to clean up the town, it appears the city county government is unable to keep up with the rate at which Nairobians dispose of their garbage. PHOTO | DENNIS ONSONGO | NATION MEDIA GROUP
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By Collins Omulo
Reporter
Nation Media Group
[SIZE=6]What you need to know:[/SIZE]
[ul]
[li]In 2014, a gunfight between rival gangs over a truckful of garbage left two dead in Donholm.[/li][li]Some of the ‘garbage cartels’ are managed by elected and nominated county leaders, who operate illegal dumpsites.[/li][li]Nairobi generates about 2,500 tonnes of solid waste from about 900,000 households daily.[/li][/ul]
Two incidents in the last decade exposed the mafia-like underworld that is the city’s garbage collection industry.

In 2014, a gunfight between rival gangs over a truckful of garbage left two dead in Donholm. The second was the stabbing to death of a gang leader in Dandora over the control of the city dumpsite.
A crackdown later and police officers recovered five guns. Several gang members died in revenge attacks.

The armed gangs operate with impunity. This is an enterprise that law enforcers have either been unable to deal with or have taken sides, lining their pockets with millions of shillings from the filth.
ILLEGAL DUMPSITES
Some of the ‘garbage cartels’ are managed by elected and nominated county leaders, who operate illegal dumpsites.
“Some leaders are in the garbage collection business. Some dump the trash in rivers and other undesignated areas,” a source told the Nation.
Nairobi generates about 2,500 tonnes of solid waste from about 900,000 households daily. City Hall collects only 1,000 tonnes.
The Environment and Natural Resources director Isaac Muraya told the Nation in 2018 that the county collects about 70 per cent of the waste while private firms, community-based organisations and other actors deal with the remaining.
County staff, assisted by hired contractors, collect mainly public waste and garbage from high generating areas like markets and factories. The arrangement opens up doors for unlicensed players to deal with the remaining areas.
EASY COLLECTION
For easy collection, former Governor Evans Kidero’s administration divided the city into 17 zones. Each was managed by specific contractors. “Private firms serve gated communities in medium and high income areas. They usually have contractual obligations with waste generators,” Mr Muraya said.

He admitted that unlicensed actors do not take their garbage to Dandora because a they would have to part with Sh1,000 per tonne. “They avoid the official dumpsite and take the garbage to undesignated areas to maximise profits,” he said.
Unlicensed collectors usually come for the garbage at night to avoid officers from the Nairobi Inspectorate Department.
If, for instance, the average fee of Sh500 is charged on each household, it means unlicensed collectors make more than Sh5.4 billion annually.
Ms Lencer Atieno, a resident of Lucky Summer estate, says most illegal dumpsites are in the slums, adding that the landfills are not easily accessible.
LOWEST FEE
She says the garbage mostly comes from Lavington, Karen, Kileleshwa, Runda, Muthaiga and other posh regions.
The Kenya Alliance of Resident Associations (Kara) chief executive Henry Ochieng says private collectors charge between Sh200 and Sh2,000. Eastlands residents pay the lowest fee.
Youths employed by the unlicensed collectors move from door to door getting the trash at a fee.
“This mound has been here for long and continues to grow,” Ms Atieno says, pointing at a hill of garbage that appears more than six months old.
“You will never see them when they are dumping. You only notice the garbage when you wake up in the morning,” she says.
The Waste and Environment Management Association of Kenya (Wemak) lobby reached out to Nairobi Governor Mike Sonko soon after he assumed office in 2017 and asked him to dismantle the cartels.
Wemak chairman Chege Kariuki called on the governor to insist on zoning and franchising trash collection as a way of eliminating the “cartels that control the industry”.

CARTELS
Mr Kariuki said scrapping unnecessary conditions such as road licence fees, tipping charges and payment for security in Dandora on private operators would streamline the industry, thus driving unlicensed individuals and firms out of business.
The many charges at the dumpsite have made the cartels thrive, he added.
The setting up of designated holding areas for recyclable waste would help keep Nairobi clean, create employment and eliminate illegal stations.
“We pay an authority licence fee of Sh20,000 per vehicle annually, Sh1,000 per truck for each trip as tipping fee, Sh5,000 for the National Environment Management Authority (Nema) permit and many other charges.
These charges are a burden that makes the illegal business thrive,” said Mr Kariuki.

This time ni kama some tree huggers in the EU/US are pushing hard. Has something to do with environmentalists and going green. Ikijengwa plastic waste will be a rare commodity

Meffi ya Kayole kwa panya inaeza supply fuel ya tududu for the next decade

On paper plans huwa fantastic but kwa kutenda hakuna

Hata uhurru si alikuwa Kwa hii business

These seem to be the only places with proper garbage collection routines. Only account for <2pc of the city.:oops:

I
Have
No
Faith
In
Nairobi
People
Or
Their
Leaders

Scandal loading.

This will never happen. Even developed countries use land fills to dispose their garbage, just like the way we do at dandora.

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wakenya huishi maisha ya kifalme. Mnataka mnye, mzungu aje awapanguze uchafu, awatengezee stima? Mzungu ndiye anakuja kusafisha environment yenu?

Project ilisha anza?