Initiative to unlock coastal counties' innovation potential

Business
By Sofia Ali | Jul 25, 2025
Youth Affairs and Creative Economy PS Fikirini Jacobs Kahindi at a past event. [Kanyiri Wahito, Standard]

Calls have intensified to equip young people in Kenya’s coastal region with the tools they need to protect, commercialise, and grow their innovations.

This will help in transforming the area into a dynamic hub of entrepreneurship and sustainable development.

Speaking during a preparatory meeting in Nairobi for the upcoming 6th edition of Pwani Innovation Week, scheduled for October 27–31, 2025, Principal Secretary (PS) for Youth Affairs Fikirini Kahindi said the coastal region is rich in youthful energy, creativity, and cultural diversity, which remain untapped due to challenges like high youth unemployment, drug abuse and limited institutional support for innovation.

Youth-led ventures that draw on indigenous knowledge like herbal medicine, artisanal crafts, and marine resources are being encouraged to unlock the region’s potential in the blue and green economies.

Cultural industries such as music, fashion, and digital storytelling also present powerful avenues for job creation while preserving coastal heritage.

Stakeholders in attendance, including policymakers, private sector leaders, civil society actors and youth representatives, agreed on the urgent need to accelerate youth-led innovation and creativity across the coastal counties.

PS in the State Department for East African Community Dr Kevit Desai highlighted the lack of intellectual property protection as one of the critical barriers facing youth innovators.

“Many young entrepreneurs in the coastal region lack access to the tools and knowledge needed to safeguard their ideas, which limits their ability to scale, attract investment, or compete in national and global markets,” he said.

Ms Carla Benini, Chargé d’Affaires at the US Embassy, reiterated the US government’s commitment to supporting youth innovation.

PS in the State Department of Science, Research and Innovation Shaukat Abdulrazak said there is a need to bring these efforts together.

“A united approach is needed to establish the Kenyan Coast as a resilient, innovative, and inclusive economic hub” said Shaukat.

Share this story
Talanta City: How Kenya is catching up to East Africa's stadium giants
The global case studies are evidence enough of the transformative multiplier effects that stadiums can cause.
New EU laws brew trouble for Kenya's smallholder coffee farmers
The EUDR mandates that all agricultural products entering the EU—including coffee—must be traceable to land that has not been deforested after December 31, 2020.
Kenya and rest of Africa lagging in green energy wave, UN warns
The report emphasises, "government action must steer markets by providing coherent and sustained long-term policy signals, regulatory frameworks, and market incentives." 
Electricity demand rises to record high of 2,362MW
Kenya's daily electricity demand hit a record high of 2,362.28 MW on July 23, driven by industrial expansion, increased urbanisation, and rising domestic energy use.
De La Rue counts heavy cost of unceremonious Kenya exit
Closure of British currency printer’s lucrative Kenyan unit saw revenue in its currency division plummet by 18.7 per cent to Sh35.94 billion in 2023 from Sh44.19 billion.
.
RECOMMENDED NEWS