KenGen Shareholders Back Governance Overhaul Aimed at Reassuring Investors

KenGen Shareholders Back Governance Overhaul Aimed at Reassuring Investors

Nairobi, Thursday, February 12, 2026

KenGen Shareholders Back Governance Overhaul Aimed at Reassuring Investors Nairobi, Thursday, February 12, 2026: Shareholders of Kenya Electricity GeneratingCompany PLC (KenGen) today approved changes to the company’s governance framework in a move aimed at strengthening board independence and minority shareholder protections, as the state-backed utility seeks to bolster investor confidence. The resolution was approved at a duly convened Extraordinary General Meeting held virtually, as private investors increasingly assert influence over long-term capital allocation and governance discipline within Kenya’s listed state-controlled entities.


Kenya Electricity Generating Company PLC (KenGen), which supplies over 60% of the country’s electricity, affirmed that the approved amendments do not dilute or alter the Government of Kenya’s ownership stake. Instead, executives framed the reforms as a structural upgrade intended to align the company with international governance standards for publicly listed firms with dominant state shareholders.“These changes are about predictability and trust,” the company’s chairman, Hon. Alfred Agoi, said after the meeting. “They strengthen independence at board level while preserving the government’s position as majority shareholder,” he added.


At the core of the overhaul is a revised board structure that expands the role of independent directors. Also under the new framework, independent directors must step down if they assume political office or become employees of government or stateowned entities, provisions designed to limit political exposure and perceived governance risk. For minority investors, the most consequential change is the introduction of a ringfenced voting mechanism that allows non-state shareholders to elect independent directors without participation from the majority shareholder. Managing Director and CEO, Eng. Peter Njenga said the reforms were intended to support disciplined capital allocation and operational performance. “Strong governance lowers risk premiums,” he said. “That matters when you are financing large-scale energy infrastructure over decades as we plan to do between now and 2034.” The governance reset comes as KenGen continues to execute capital-intensive investments in geothermal, hydro, nuclear, solar, and wind power, projects that require long-term funding visibility and stable policy backing.

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Note to Editor:
About KenGen

Kenya Electricity Generating Company PLC (KenGen) is the leading electricity generation company in the Eastern Africa region, with an installed generation capacity market share of over 60%. The company’s primary business is to provide safe, reliable, and competitively priced electric energy for the country in an environmentally friendly and sustainable manner while creating value for its stakeholders.

Today, KenGen PLC has an installed generation capacity of 1,786 MW, of which over 93% is drawn from renewable sources, namely Hydro (826 MW), Geothermal (754 MW), and Wind (25.5 MW). The balance is from Thermal.

For media queries, please contact: Frank D. Ochieng, Tel: 0721816896 Email: [email protected] or [email protected]

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