Nairobi Urban Planning Suffers Setback as U.S. Halts Funding

Nairobi’s long-term urban planning efforts have been thrown into uncertainty after the U.S. government cancelled funding for a Ksh7.76 billion GIS-based transport management platform, a flagship project meant to modernise how the capital handles traffic, zoning, and infrastructure planning.

The cancellation was revealed in the National Treasury’s Energy, Infrastructure, and ICT Sector Working Group Report for FY 2026/27–2028/29, which confirmed that the platform, the backbone of the wider KMDF Nairobi Metropolitan Area (NMA) transport overhaul, has stalled at only 30 per cent completion.

According to the report, the project’s collapse stems from a shift in U.S. foreign aid policy, which disrupted several Nairobi Metropolitan Area transport initiatives previously funded under the Kenya Millennium Development Fund (KMDF). The reforms were expected to support coordinated urban planning across Nairobi, Machakos, Kiambu, Kajiado, and Murang’a counties.

Planned in 2023 following President William Ruto’s visit to Washington, the project was to be largely financed by the U.S., which had committed Ksh5.8 billion against Kenya’s Ksh1.56 billion contribution. The GIS platform was designed to centralise all urban transport data, guide traffic flow decisions, and shape future zoning regulations — tools officials hoped would address Nairobi’s persistent congestion and rapid urban growth.

The Treasury report shows that multiple related targets, including integrated zoning frameworks and metropolitan policy guidelines, have also been left incomplete, raising concerns about Nairobi’s readiness for future expansion and infrastructure demands.

Urban planners warn that without the digital platform, Nairobi risks relying on outdated, fragmented data systems that slow down project approvals and weaken road-network planning. The halted system was meant to strengthen multimodal transport integration involving roads, rail, non-motorised transport, and public transit.

The Treasury notes that the suspended projects may be revived under the Nairobi Metropolitan Area Transport Authority (NaMATA) in the next financial year, subject to resolution of external funding challenges. For now, however, Nairobi’s modernisation blueprint faces a significant roadblock.

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