COLLOH-MZII RELOADED
JF-Expert Member
- Apr 6, 2017
- 7,544
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So between Kenya and Tanzania which one is betterlike i said before im a pretoria born n bred
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So between Kenya and Tanzania which one is betterlike i said before im a pretoria born n bred
That is eldoret...no Nairobi pic dude...we can be compared to SA because we are not ldcs like u guysdude the view of nairobi pictured in your photos is too low to be compared with pretoria,johannesburg or capetown.
stay away from SA,your competition level is within tanzania,uganda and rwanda.
you are embarrassing yourself,better engage the south african guy by words than pictures.
the few photos he has provided,prove to be far way better than than yours.[emoji23][emoji23]
You guys are funny mmeamua sasa kuback up south A si TanzaniaN r the 1st I realise that eldoret is glorified village lmao
Sasa macity za wazungu na hazijatuachia mbaliKaka yangu colo we shindana na sisi tu [emoji23] [emoji23] huyo Mr t time sio level yetu eldoret vs port Eliza bet kweli ni sawa sawa na mwendokasi vs bajaji
Mnachekesha sana nyie wakenya...mnadhani mmeendelea kumbe bado wamatopeni mkiambiwa mnavimbaYou guys are funny mmeamua sasa kuback up south A si Tanzania
Hadi aibu Mr t time anavyo tunyoosha hamna cha middle income wala nini [emoji23] [emoji23] [emoji23]
Kenya 2030 itakua iko na south Africa juu economy ya south a inashrinkMnachekesha sana nyie wakenya...mnadhani mmeendelea kumbe bado wamatopeni mkiambiwa mnavimba
i dont know which one is better but i know they are both competing for the crown of east africa which makes them direct competitors even though from what i know and understand kenya has that titleSo between Kenya and Tanzania which one is better
Usiamini sana paper even kuna paper inasema mwaka huo Tz itakua na uchumi mkubwa zaidi east sasa ukiamini matazamio zaidi tasipotimia utaumia!!south Africa Ni upper middle income economy. ..BRICS hadi huo muda itakua ni rich economy endelea kuotaKenya 2030 itakua iko na south Africa juu economy ya south a inashrink
papers are saying we are not doing good but in the streets its different bro look at this lolKenya 2030 itakua iko na south Africa juu economy ya south a inashrink
LDC vs DCwe can be compared to SA because we are not ldcs like u guys
[emoji23] [emoji23] [emoji23] [emoji23] [emoji23] [emoji23] [emoji23] [emoji23] [emoji23] Nairobi ni glorified village [emoji125] [emoji125] [emoji125] [emoji125] [emoji125] [emoji125] [emoji125] [emoji125] [emoji125] [emoji125] [emoji125] [emoji125] [emoji125] [emoji125]
Kwa maoni yako mifi[emoji23] [emoji23] [emoji23] [emoji23] [emoji23] [emoji23] [emoji23] [emoji23] [emoji23] Nairobi ni glorified village [emoji125] [emoji125] [emoji125] [emoji125] [emoji125] [emoji125] [emoji125] [emoji125] [emoji125] [emoji125] [emoji125] [emoji125] [emoji125] [emoji125]
I think you're a Tanzanian.. Unatuchezea game hapa...i dont know which one is better but i know they are both competing for the crown of east africa which makes them direct competitors even though from what i know and understand kenya has that title
Glorified villages kwenye ubora wake[emoji23] [emoji23] [emoji23] [emoji23] [emoji23] [emoji23]Lamu
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NAKURU
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KEREITA
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KERICHO
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MOMBASA
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WASINI
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Uyo sio mbongoI think you're a Tanzanian.. Unatuchezea game hapa...
like i said before im a pretoria born n bred
Huna akiliKenya’s ongoing infrastructure boom started with former President Mwai Kibaki. Grand projects like Thika Road, and the Northern, Eastern and Southern Bypasses in Nairobi, ushered in a national sense of yes-we-can. This has become part of the contemporary Kenyan mindset.
While Kibaki’s tenure was impressive in terms of infrastructure, the first term of his successor, President Uhuru Kenyatta, is truly mind-blowing, though:
At a record pace, Chinese contractors are building the new Standard Gauge Railway (SGR), replacing the century old narrow-gauge railway, built by the British. Upon completion, the new railway is likely to edge out road transport between Mombasa and Nairobi obsolete, removing most of the trucks on that road. The railway is planned to continue to Kigali through Kampala, although the Kampala-Kigali section seems uncertain at the moment.
With less than a year until the first trains hit the rails, the government has announced official plans to expand the Nairobi-Mombasa highway to six lanes. A highway of this magnitude will be a first-ever in Sub-Saharan Africa. The impact on the regional economy will doubtlessly be significant.
Mombasa is also undergoing an infrastructure revolution: The Mombasa Port, already the busiest in the region by far, is in a massive expansion process. Eventually, its total capacity is projected to reach 2.55 TEU p.a by 2019. This will put Mombasa at par with Durban and Tanger (second and third in Africa respectively). At the same time, the ongoing Dongo Kundu Bypass project will link the North and South Coast, eliminating the current ferry connection, and with it, the hellish jams through Mombasa Island.
Mombasa is about to get a serious domestic competitor, though, with the new Lamu Port currently under construction about to take over the position as the number one regional port. The total capacity in TEUs for the Lamu Port does not appear in official documents. It is allegedly projected to become the number one port on the continent, though.
Meanwhile, Tanzania shelved their plans to build Africa’s biggest port in Bagamoyo, leaving Kenya’s position unchallenged.
Along with the Lamu Port project, Kenya is constructing its second national transport corridor, dubbed the Lamu Port – South Sudan – Ethiopia (LAPSSET) Corridor. This infrastructural mega-project features a second standard-gauge railway, an oil pipeline, and a (or several) high-capacity fibre-optic cable(s).
LAPSSET will connect Southern Ethiopia and South Sudan to Kenya’s infrastructure network, while giving Northern Kenya a historic boost. As a pre-cursor, the Isiolo-Mandera road, commenced under Kibaki, is already almost complete, connecting Kenya and Ethiopia by road.
In a perspective of Pan-African infrastructure, LAPSSET and the Mombasa-Kampala railway and highway (when eventually extended from Nairobi to Kampala) play an even greater role: Isiolo-Moyale was and is an important section of the legendary Cape-Cairo highway (aka the TAH 4), planned for more than a century. With the Kenyan part complete, two sections in Tanzania and Northern Sudan still remain, but the project is one crucial step closer to completion.
LAPSSET also opens up an alternative route for the Mombasa-Lagos Highway (aka the TAH 8), long hampered by perennial instability in DRC. Obviously, stability in South Sudan has recently become another risk factor, although seemingly a more temporary one.
In terms of digital infrastructure, Kenya is already a continental champion, with 8 terrestrial fibre optic cables (backbones), matched only by South Africa.
Kenya is also connected globally via seven submarine fibre-optic cables, beaten only by Djibouti and Egypt. As a result, Kenya already has one of the most robust internet uplinks on the continent. While currently, all those cables terminate in Mombasa, the LAPSSET project will add a second one in Lamu, also boosting redundancy.
Energy is an obvious pre-requisite for Kenya to benefit from the world-class infrastructure the country is building. Fortunately, this has by no mean been neglected.
In 2010, Kenya had an installed generating capacity of 1050 megawatt (MW). That has already increased to 2300 Mph, with a number of other projects, such as Lake Turkana Wind Power about to boost this figure further. While the stated national target of 5000MW by EOY 2017 seems unlikely to be met, the growth in installed capacity is nevertheless an impressive achievement. The government’s own target for 2030, is 23,000 MW, underpinned in part by the four planned nuclear reactors to go live by 2027.
While many African countries are investing heavily in infrastructure, few if any are in the same league as Kenya. This is almost certainly part of the reason why Nairobi has already taken the top position as Africa’s number one foreign direct investment (FDI) destination, and why Kenya as a country is also the fastest-growing FDI destination on the continent.
Read more at:
The rise and rise of Kenya's infrastructure | Bauck.com