KenGen Shareholders Approve Governance Overhaul to Boost Investor Confidence
Shareholders of Kenya Electricity Generating Company PLC (KenGen) have approved significant changes to the company’s governance framework in a move aimed at strengthening board independence and safeguarding minority investor interests.
The resolution was passed during an Extraordinary General Meeting held in Nairobion Thursday, reflecting growing private investor influence over governance and capital allocation in state-controlled listed entities.
KenGen, which generates over 60% of Kenya’s electricity, confirmed that the reforms do not affect the Government of Kenya’s majority ownership. Instead, the changes are framed as a structural upgrade to align the company with international governance standards for publicly listed firms with dominant state shareholders.
“These changes are about predictability and trust,” said KenGen Chairman Hon. Alfred Agoi. “They strengthen independence at board level while preserving the government’s position as majority shareholder.”
The governance overhaul includes a revised board structure that expands the role of independent directors. Under the new framework, independent directors must resign if they take political office or join government or state-owned entities, reducing political influence and governance risk.
A key benefit for minority shareholders is a new ring-fenced voting mechanism, allowing non-state investors to elect independent directors without interference from the government.
Managing Director and CEO Eng. Peter Njenga emphasized that the reforms support disciplined capital allocation and operational performance. “Strong governance lowers risk premiums,” he said. “That matters when financing large-scale energy infrastructure over decades, as we plan to do through 2034.”
The governance reset comes as KenGen advances capital-intensive projects across geothermal, hydro, nuclear, solar, and wind power, all of which require long-term funding certainty and stable policy support.


