The Kenya Climate Change Knowledge Portal (KCCKP) is a one stop repository of climate change information in Kenya. This is an initiative of the Climate Change Directorate (CCD), the lead agency of the government on national climate change plans and actions. The Climate Change Directorate, will among other duties and functions, serve as the national knowledge and information management centre for collating, verifying, refining, and disseminating knowledge and information on climate change. The KCCKP will help to link climate change actors across various sectors and their initiatives by providing a platform to address issues relating to climate change. This will go a long way in bridging the information gap amongst various actors in the climate change arena and also show case initiatives by different actors.

No item found. Please check your config!

Video Gallery

Kenya Climate Change Art and Essay Competition Journey

Frequently Asked Questions

mitigation

 

What is climate change mitigation?

Climate change mitigation are efforts that seek to prevent or slow down the increase of greenhouse gas global warming into the atmosphere. Mitigation also means human interventions to reduce the sources of greenhouse geseas or to enhance their removal from the atmosphere by sinks. Greenhouse gases are the gases that absorb and emit energy into the atmosphere thereby causing global warming. The primary Greenhouse Gases are the Carbon Dioxide (CO2), Methane (CH4) and Nitrous Oxide (N2O). The other Greenhouse gasses are hydroflourocarbons (HFCs), perflourocarbons (PFCs) and Sulphur hexafluoride (SF6).

What are the  sources Greenhouse Gases?

Burning of fossil fuels and land use chanage through deforestation are the majors sources of carbon dioxide .  Mathane and nitirus oxide come from  agriuclture especially fertilizers and livestock wastes as well as rotten wastes while industrial process are the main sources of flourocarbons

 

How do we mitigate climate change

Climate change mitigation requires adopting to clean or renewable energy sources such as solar, wind, hydropower and promotion of geothermal generation; promotion of more efficient transport system technologies; promotion of energy efficient buildings and changing human behaviors. Kenya has adopted sector approach to address climate change mitigation.  Some of the sector mitigation approaches are:

  1. Kenya promotes renwable energy technologies such as geothermal power, wind; hydroelectric power and solar generation; improved cook stoves that use less wood fule for hgher efficiency and energy saving bulbs in Energy sector.
  2. Promotion of mass transport modes such as bus rapid transit (BRT) and rail transit system in cities and towns to decongest traffic, non-motorized modes of transport (NMT) such as bicycles and phasing out old and inefficient (high fuel-consuming) motor vehicles by encouraging importation of efficient vehicles through tax incentives and other financial tools in Transport sector.
  3. Restoration of f forests on degraded lands and reforestation of degraded forests and improvement of trees species to increase biomass productivity and carbon sequestration in Forestry sector
  4. Management of livestock and manure to reduce CH4emissions (e.g agricultural waste to produce biogas); improved fertilizer application techniques to reduce N2O emissions; promotion of dedicated energy crops to replace fossil fuel for use as biofuel; recycling of agricultural waste for generation of energy (Co-generation); promotion of agroforestry technology for carbon sequestration in Agriculture sector
  5. Waster sector technology include methane capture from municipal waste for generation of biogas and from landfills involving extraction of methane gas and other pollutants

 

Kenya’s mitigation priority actions are well captured in the National Climate Change Action Plan (NCCAP 2013-2017), which is currently under review to include Kenya’s commitments to the Paris Agreement. The NCCAP is embedded in the MTPIII   to ensure budgeting for implementation.

 

What is climate?

The climate is the weather conditions in a particular region.

What is Climate Change?

A change in the statistical distribution of weather patterns when that change lasts for an extended period of at least 30 years.

What is climate variability?

Variations (ups and downs) in climatic conditions on time scales of months, years or less than three decades

What is climate change adaptation?

Changes in processes, practices, and structures to moderate potential damages or to benefit from opportunities associated with climate change

Read more FAQs

Highlights

The Ten (10) Million Trees Initiative  for  Restoration of Maasai Mau Forest (Water Tower)……Read MorePowered by WPeMatico ...
Read More
Rift Valley Regional Commissioner Mr. George Natembeya has banned grazing in Maasai Mau forest with immediate effect as the 60-day eviction notice comes to a close in the next few days. Speaking to the press in Narok town after chairing a multi-sectoral meeting on Mau forest today, Natembeya also banned any movement and human activities in Maasai Mau forest terming ...
Read More
Prospects for the country to migrate from linear to circular model of waste management are in top gear following the collaboration between the Ministry of Environment and Forestry, Head of Public Service and the Nairobi City County Government. A meeting chaired by the Environment and Forestry Chief Administrative Secretary Hon. Mohammed Elmi and attended by the Deputy Head of Public ...
Read More
A section of Karatina Vocational Training Center students holding up trees during the launch of a tree planting campaign for this short rainfall season where the government targets to plant 30, 000 trees. The opportunity to raise the country’s tree cover from the current 7.2 to 10 percent by the year 2022 in line with government projections lies in private ...
Read More
Members of public visiting various exhibition stalls during a one day Agricultural education event held at Wamunyu in Mwala sub county Kenya is very vulnerable to climate change with current projections suggesting that its temperature will rise up by 2.5ºC in the near future while rainfall will become more intense and less predictable. Even the slightest increase in frequency of droughts will present ...
Read More