Kenya taps TDB, AFC to arrange $1.2 billion airport expansion finance

Reuters
By Reuters June 21, 2026 07:34 (EAT)
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Kenya taps TDB, AFC to arrange $1.2 billion airport expansion finance

A general view shows people at the Jomo Kenyatta International Airport ahead of a strike by Kenya airports union workers to protest on September 10, 2024. REUTERS/Thomas Mukoya/File Photo

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Kenya has contracted Africa's Trade and Development Bank and Africa Finance Corporation to arrange financing for a $1.2 billion ​expansion of its main airport in Nairobi, the transport ‌minister said.
The East African nation is aiming to nearly triple Jomo Kenyatta International Airport's annual passenger handling capacity to 22 million, but had to ​pause the project last year after it cancelled a ​deal with India's Adani group in 2024 following the ⁠indictment of its founder in the United States.
"The project ​is intended to be funded through leveraging of airport-based revenue streams. ​The arrangers will crowd in Development Financial Institutions and commercial banks," Transport Minister Davis Chirchir said in a statement late on Thursday.

The project is ​expected to cost a maximum of 154.2 billion shillings ($1.19 billion), ​he said, and construction will take three years.
He said an international, competitive bidding ‌process ⁠for implementing the project had already taken place.
Local and international media have reported that China Communication Construction Company already won the contract. The minister did not address the reports.
The project involves ​rehabilitating existing airport ​facilities, including ⁠runways and aprons, and building a new passenger terminal to boost annual passenger handling capacity to ​22 million, from 7.5 million.
Kenya is keen to ​maintain its ⁠position as a travel hub in the region, even as Ethiopia and Rwanda invest billions in new airport to entice airlines ⁠and ​travellers.
The country is also seeking seeking new ​ways to finance infrastructure after a debt surge squeezed its finances.
($1 = 129.3500 Kenyan ​shillings)

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