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Ruto calls for new regime in licences for forest logging

Ruto calls for new regime in licences for forest logging
President William Ruto and Environment CS Aden Duale during the pass-out parade of the KFS cadets in Gilgil, Nakuru County. PHOTO/@HonAdenDuale/X

Logging licences will no longer be issued in an opaque manner, President William Ruto has announced.

Instead, the President directed that this should from now on be done through open and public tendering.

This way, Kenyans will get value for forest resources, while transparency will develop the capacity of local industry to utilise them and boost job creation, he said.

“To make sure that we exploit our forest resources in a transparent and effective manner, the old method of allocating forest resources in a manner that is not transparent has to stop,” he said.

“Going forward, all public resources in the forests will be tendered for in a transparent manner.”

He spoke during the passing out parade of Kenya Forest Service (KFS) inspector cadets and forester trainees at the National Youth Service headquarters in Gilgil, Nakuru County, on Monday.

He congratulated the KFS leadership for demonstrable achievements, noting that the reforms instituted at the service two years ago have paid off with illegal logging reducing by 90 per cent in the same period.

Further, President Ruto pointed out, the service now largely runs its operations from internally generated revenue, an example that should be emulated by other government institutions.

“This year, we only supported KFS to the tune of Sh280 million. The rest of the Sh4.7 billlion budget was raised by KFS itself. I have the undertaking of the minister (Enviroment, Climate Change and Forestry Cabinet Secretary Adan Duale) and KFS that next year it will no longer require resources from the Exchequer. You are an example to other agencies that it is possible to run on internally generated resources,” the President said.

During the ceremony, 465 forest officers, the highest number since independence, and 102 forest cadets, the first ever to be hired, graduated.

They joined 2,600 forest rangers hired last year and those already in the service to drive Kenya’s environmental conservation and climate action agenda.                                                  – PCS

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