Many flagship projects funded by donors are staring at
uncertainty after the government failed to honour its required counterpart
funding.
Auditor General Nancy Gathungu has singled out 20 projects
that faced severe challenges relating to government counterpart funding,
painting a grim picture of fiscal mismanagement that threatens to derail
critical national development initiatives.
This followed a comprehensive review of project
implementation across donor-funded portfolios during the financial year ending
June 30, 2024.
“Some projects recorded counterpart underfunding while
others channelled funds through undesignated project accounts and lacked
supporting documentation for counterpart disbursements,” Gathungu said.
She said these “lapses contravened provisions of
financing agreements and public finance management regulations”.
"The situation has affected the timely execution
of activities and increased the risk of delayed or compromised achievement of
project outcomes.”
The audit has revealed the scale of the failure, with the
total amount in question exceeding Sh18.1 billion (that is what the government is
yet to contribute).
The audit reveals a pattern of neglect and chaos that spans
multiple key sectors of the economy, from health to education to infrastructure.
In one of the most glaring examples, the Kenya Primary
Education Equity in Learning Program, a cornerstone initiative for basic
education, was completely starved of funds.
Despite a colossal government commitment of Sh14.6 billion,
not a single shilling was disbursed during the entire financial year, crippling
the program's operations and jeopardising its objectives.
The transport sector was also hard hit.
The construction of five vital footbridges and the T-Mall
flyover on Mombasa and Langata Roads, a project intended to ease Nairobi's
notorious traffic congestion, is constrained.
The government provided a meager Sh8.6 million against a
promised Sh40 million, leaving a gaping hole of Sh31.4 million and casting
doubt on the project's completion.
Similarly, the Horn of Africa Gateway Development Project
has been operating with a severe underfunding of Sh448 million, a critical
shortfall that persists even though four years of the project period have
already lapsed.
The Eastern Africa Regional Transport, Trade and Development
Facilitation Project faces a similar race against time, with a balance of Sh663
million undisbursed and only six months remaining until its scheduled closure.
Agriculture, the backbone of the economy and President Ruto’s
key value chain, is another major casualty of this funding crisis, worsened by
a tight fiscal space.
The ambitious De-Risking, Inclusion and Value Enhancement
(DRIVE) of Pastoral Economies project is missing Sh441.4 million of its
promised government funding, undermining efforts to build resilience in arid and
semi-arid regions.
The National Agricultural Value Chain Development Project is
reeling from the failure of sixteen counties to remit their contributions of
Sh5 million each, creating a collective shortfall of Sh80 million.
Furthermore, the Small-Scale Irrigation and Value Addition
Project was compromised not by a lack of funds, but by their misdirection,
In the referenced case, Sh99 million in counterpart funding
was spent directly through the State Department instead of the project account,
a situation Gathungu said violated agreed financial protocols.
The audit uncovered not just a lack of funding but also
alarming irregularities in how available funds were handled.
In the Multi-National Drought Resilience Programme, the
State Department for Agriculture bypassed the project account entirely,
directly paying Sh80.3 million on its behalf.
A similarly troubling case was found at the East Africa
Centre of Excellence for Biomedical Sciences, where Sh28.1 million was funnelled
directly to the Ministry of Health instead of the designated project account,
creating lack of transparency and accountability.
In West Pokot, the Emergency Locust Response Project was
complicated by introduction of Sh10 million from local Saccos.
The funding mechanism was entirely absent from the original
financing agreement, potentially creating future legal and accounting
complications.
The Kenya Towns Sustainable Water Supply and Sanitation
Programme, implemented by the Tana Water Works Development Agency, is plagued
by delays in compensating Project Affected Persons, with Sh309.7 million tied
up, preventing families from moving on with their lives.
The Nairobi Rivers Basin Rehabilitation project, a key
environmental restoration effort Ruto’s team has taken up, is now in serious
doubt.
It is uncertain whether the balance of Sh505 million needed
to complete it will arrive before it is scheduled to close in December.
In further highlights that point to a breakdown in
governance, projects like the Eastern and Southern Africa Higher Education
Centres of Excellence had achieved 100 per cent of their targets but reported
issues.
They were marred by the management's failure even to provide bank statements for counterpart funds, suggesting disregard for oversight.
INSTANT ANALYSIS
The sheer scale of the financial shortfall, of over Sh18
billion, indicates a challenge with budgetary planning and execution. This
isn't about a single project running into trouble, but a pattern of neglect
across multiple government entities. The most shocking example is the complete
failure to disburse even a shilling of the Sh14.6 billion committed to the
education program. The result is that flagship projects, often launched with
great publicity, are left to languish, accruing penalties (commitment fees
on undisbursed loans) and risk cancellation by donor partners.