Kenya airport expansion financing has gained momentum as the government moves to secure $2 billion from international development lenders to modernize and enlarge Nairobi’s Jomo Kenyatta International Airport (JKIA). This push comes nine months after Kenya cancelled a public-private partnership (PPP) with India’s Adani Group, following U.S. legal charges against the company’s founder.
Transport Minister Davis Chirchir said the government has approached several development finance institutions. The list includes the Japan International Cooperation Agency (JICA), China Exim Bank, KfW (Germany), the European Investment Bank, and the African Development Bank (AfDB).
The new plan replaces the Adani concession model with a direct government-led build. Kenya will finance and oversee construction. Later, it may consider concessioning the facility once upgrades are complete. This shift gives the state more control during construction while keeping future private involvement possible.
The project will deliver a second runway to improve capacity and a new terminal to handle growing passenger numbers. JKIA is already a key hub for East and Central Africa. Traffic growth, driven by trade and tourism, has pushed existing infrastructure to its limits.
Planned upgrades also include better baggage systems, expanded cargo facilities, and improved passenger amenities. The Kenya Airports Authority expects the changes to cut congestion and strengthen the airport’s regional competitiveness.
Kenya airport expansion is part of a wider plan to manage debt while advancing infrastructure. Rising public debt has pushed the government toward blended financing that limits commercial borrowing.
Alongside the airport, the government will issue a 175 billion shilling ($1.36 billion) securitised bond for road projects. The bond will be backed by revenue streams to give investors repayment security. By using JKIA’s balance sheet, the project aims to secure long-term, low-cost funding from development lenders. This model also reduces risks for any future concessionaire.
The $736 million PPP with an Adani subsidiary was designed as a design-build-operate-transfer (DBOT) deal. Under it, Adani would finance, build, and operate a new terminal for 30 years before handing it back.
That plan ended after U.S. prosecutors charged Gautam Adani and senior executives with bribery and misleading investors. Adani denied the charges but pledged to cooperate with investigations. President William Ruto ordered the termination of the deal in 2024. Around the same time, Kenya also cancelled an Adani-linked PPP for power transmission lines. The case highlighted the risks of granting long-term concessions to single operators without broad vetting. It also reinforced the value of diverse funding sources.
The Transport Ministry plans to seek contractors once funding is confirmed. Global construction firms with airport expertise are expected to bid. If operations are concessioned later, the asset could draw interest from international airport operators and infrastructure funds.
JKIA’s role as a trade and tourism hub means the expansion’s impact will reach far beyond aviation. Development lenders see it as a high-impact investment for economic growth and regional integration.
If executed well, the project could become a model for Kenya’s evolving approach to infrastructure, one that blends public leadership, multilateral funding, and targeted private involvement.