Kenya is cementing its status as a global clean energy powerhouse by accelerating massive expansions at the Olkaria Geothermal Complex. Driven by the Kenya Electricity Generating Company (KenGen), the nation currently ranks as Africa’s top geothermal producer and 7th globally. Geothermal power forms the backbone of Kenya’s grid, supplying nearly half of the country’s total electricity and pushing its overall renewable energy mix past 90%.
Major Upgrades & ExpansionsOlkaria I Rehabilitation:KenGen is comprehensively upgrading Africa’s oldest geothermal plant.It will boost output from 45MW to 63MW to restore it to the national grid.Olkaria VI Development:Engineers are developing Olkaria VI as an 86MW public-private partnership project.Upon completion, it is slated to become the largest single-turbine geothermal plant on earth.
Olkaria VII Project:Located within Hell’s Gate National Park, this Sh32.2 billion project targets expanding regional capacity up to 879.3MW.It is projected to yield up to Sh3.76 billion annually in carbon credits.The 1-Gigawatt Goal and BeyondKenya’s total operational geothermal capacity currently stands at 985MW–988.7MW. With the delivery of new steam turbines from Japan and ongoing regional projects like the Menengai steam field, Kenya is on the verge of joining the elite 1-Gigawatt geothermal club.
The government estimates a massive 10,000MW of untapped geothermal potential along the Great Rift Valley. Tapping this heat provides a stable, 24/7 baseload power source that remains unaffected by climate or weather fluctuations. These strategic expansions directly align with the country’s objective to transition to a 100% clean energy grid by 2030.



