Kenya government plans to raise KSh125bn (about $969 million) through short-term syndicated loans to support its national road construction programme, according to Bloomberg.
The borrowing will be used to bridge financing shortfalls that have slowed several highway and transport projects, as the government seeks to maintain momentum on infrastructure development despite tightening fiscal space.
The move underscores the growing pressure on Kenya’s public finances as infrastructure costs rise faster than revenues. With limited room for new long-term borrowing, the government is increasingly relying on short-term financing mechanisms to keep projects running — a strategy that carries refinancing and repayment risks if market conditions deteriorate.
According to Bloomberg, the syndicated loans will be short-term facilities, with the intention of refinancing them later through the issuance of longer-dated infrastructure bonds.
Officials familiar with the plan said the future bonds are expected to be backed by fuel levy revenues, offering investors a dedicated income stream to support debt servicing.
Such arrangements have previously been used by the government to attract buyers amid concerns over Kenya’s rising debt burden and limited fiscal headroom.
The loans are expected to be structured as a mix of local-currency and foreign-currency borrowing, helping to broaden investor participation while managing exchange-rate exposure.
Kenya’s road sector has struggled with persistent funding gaps, leading to delayed payments to contractors and stalled construction works across several counties.
Transport infrastructure remains central to President William Ruto’s economic strategy, with improved highways viewed as essential for lowering logistics costs, boosting trade and strengthening regional connectivity within East Africa.
However, rising interest costs and constrained budget allocations have limited the government’s ability to finance large-scale projects directly through the exchequer.
The decision to pursue short-term borrowing comes amid heightened sensitivity around public finance management.
In 2024, proposed tax increases sparked nationwide protests, forcing the government to scale back parts of its finance bill and complicating efforts to raise domestic revenue.
Since then, the Treasury has faced the dual challenge of maintaining development spending while keeping debt levels within targets agreed with international lenders.
Kenya’s public debt stood at about 70 percent of gross domestic product, according to official figures, prompting authorities to prioritise refinancing strategies and revenue-linked instruments over fresh long-term external loans.
While syndicated loans offer immediate liquidity, analysts caution that they expose the government to refinancing risk if investor appetite weakens or interest rates rise.
Linking future bonds to fuel levy income may improve attractiveness, but it also ties debt servicing to fuel consumption — itself vulnerable to economic slowdowns and price volatility.
Still, economists say the approach reflects the limited options available as Kenya seeks to balance infrastructure ambitions with fiscal consolidation.
For now, the borrowing is expected to keep major road projects moving, even as questions remain over the sustainability of short-term financing in an already stretched debt environment.

