Innovative financing can unlock blue economy opportunities for MSMEs

Globally, blue economy, covering everything from fisheries and aquaculture to shipping, offshore energy, biotechnology, and coastal tourism, is valued at more than $ 1.5 trillion annually and is projected to double by 2030.

Beneath these sweeping figures, however, lies a stark truth: the bulk of activities is carried out by Micro, Small and Medium Enterprises (MSMEs). They are the fishers, processors, boat builders, seaweed farmers, and eco-tourism operators who keep local economies alive.

Yet, these enterprises struggle to secure the financing that would allow them to scale, modernise, and compete fairly in a changing economy. Traditional banks often view MSMEs as high-risk clients, especially because many operate informally, with few financial records or collateral to secure loans.

Seasonal earnings tied to fishing cycles or tourism flows do not match rigid repayment schedules. High interest rates and bureaucratic requirements end up shutting out many entrepreneurs before they even begin the loan process.

This financing drought has consequences. Without affordable credit, MSMEs cannot invest in modern storage facilities, ice plants, or processing equipment that would cut losses. They cannot adopt climate-smart practices such as solar-powered cold rooms or sustainable aquaculture techniques.

As a result, livelihoods remain precarious, post-harvest losses remain high, and unsustainable practices persist. The gap between the promise of a blue economy and the lived reality of coastal communities continues to widen. Yet, there are glimpses of what is possible when finance reaches the grassroots.

Seychelles pioneered the world’s first sovereign blue bond in 2017, raising funds to support small-scale fisheries. Belize and Cabo Verde have pioneered debt-for-nature swaps, freeing up resources for marine conservation and community enterprises. Across East Africa, digital platforms are emerging to connect fishers directly to buyers, giving them stronger bargaining power and building financial records that make them more attractive to lenders.

In West Africa, solar-powered cold storage hubs, funded through blended finance, are reducing spoilage, increasing incomes, and creating creditworthy business models.

What these examples show is that innovative financing for the blue economy is possible when systems are designed with MSMEs in mind.

Banks and investors can adapt their products to the unique rhythms of coastal businesses, offering flexible repayment schedules that align with seasons, or using community-based savings groups and warehouse receipts as alternative forms of collateral.

Development partners and governments can step in with credit guarantees and concessional financing that lower the risks for lenders, making small loans more viable.

At the same time, capacity building is essential. Many coastal MSMEs lack the bookkeeping or formal business plans that lenders require.

Training in financial literacy, support for cooperatives, and digital record-keeping tools can help small enterprises become more bankable without stripping away the resilience that comes with their community-based structures. Investing in shared infrastructure, such as cold storage hubs and processing facilities, could also help reduce risks and attract financing.

Beyond financing instruments, enabling ecosystems are vital. Governments can strengthen policy frameworks that prioritise MSMEs, while impact investors and blended finance vehicles can design products that balance risk with sustainability outcomes.

Technology such as mobile money, blockchain traceability, and digital marketplaces can improve transparency and build credit histories, while better data on MSMEs’ contributions will make their value more visible to financiers.

Crucially, financing must also be inclusive, ensuring that women, the youth, and indigenous communities, often at the heart of coastal economies, gain equal access to opportunities in the blue economy.

The blue economy is already a reality, but it remains fragile under pressure from overfishing, climate change, and rising sea levels.

Expanding access to finance for MSMEs delivers a dual benefit: more resilient livelihoods and healthier ecosystems. Targeted investments in fisher cooperatives, women-led seaweed enterprises, and sustainable aquaculture creates ripple effects that strengthen communities, safeguard marine resources, and build a more resilient global economy. Policymakers and financiers have a choice to make. They can continue to overlook MSMEs in favour of large-scale projects, or they can recognise that the future of blue economy rests on small enterprises.

They may be modest in size, but their collective impact is vast. With the right financing, MSMEs can truly anchor the blue economy ensuring that the ocean remains a source of wealth, culture, and opportunity for generations to come.

Kenya in early redemption of Sh129bn Eurobond

Kenya has launched a buyback of the $1 billion (Sh129.23 billion), 10-year Eurobond that is due to mature in February 2028, looking to avoid the pain of a bullet payment on the debt.

This will be the third early repayment of a Eurobond by the government in the last two years, which is part of the Treasury’s debt management strategy of directly refinancing large upcoming maturities with new bonds of longer tenor.

Reconsider Export Promotion and Investment Levy on cement, steel

As reported in the Business Daily this week, the Trade ministry has at last acknowledged the devastating impact of the 17.5 percent Export Promotion Levy on clinker and steel billet imports. This policy, in place for over two years, has severely hindered two crucial economic sectors.

Cabinet Secretary Lee Kinyanjui’s appeal to Parliament for its repeal is not merely a policy reversal; it represents a vital lifeline for thousands of jobs, a clear rejection of monopolistic cartels, and a demonstration of decisive leadership. For this, we express our profound appreciation.

Introduced in July 2023 under the guise of boosting local production, the levy was presented as a patriotic measure to foster domestic industries. However, it quickly devolved into a classic case of policy capture, where powerful interests within government and the private sector manipulated public policy to solidify their dominance. Clinker, a crucial raw material for cement, has become prohibitively expensive for cement manufacturers. This led to factories operating at a mere 60 percent capacity, resulting in a staggering 7.9 percent drop in national cement production last year alone-a loss of 763,500 tonnes (over 15 million, 50kg bags equivalent annually).

Exports to key East African markets like Uganda and Tanzania plummeted by nearly 50 percent, eroding Kenya’s competitive edge and inflating building costs.

The same 17.5 percent levy on billets and other imports stifled downstream manufacturing, drove up prices for reinforcement bars and rods, and triggered widespread job losses as mills scaled back operations.

What was touted as an ‘export promotion’ tool benefited only a select few, creating artificial scarcities and unhealthy rivalries that disadvantaged smaller players and betrayed the very industries it claimed to protect. The official statistics, while alarming, only hint at the true extent of the damage. They fail to capture the hundreds of micro, small, and medium enterprises that were utterly destroyed by this levy, particularly in the production of steel wire products like nails, barbed wire, and mesh.

The monopolistic environment it fostered forced these small operators to procure raw materials in extremely large, dollar-denominated minimum order quantities, effectively pricing them out of existence overnight.

Consider the heartbreaking example of a company in Kikuyu Constituency, where the owner had invested Sh300 million from his retirement savings and the sale of properties. Employing 300 people and contributing significantly to local livelihoods, this company was forced to shut its doors after the levy hit, leaving its workers jobless. This is just one of thousands of employees whose dreams were deferred due to misguided policy.

This was no innocent oversight. Previous occupants of the Trade docket, armed with extensive data on the levy’s destructive ripple effects, chose inaction and convenience.

The minister’s forthright admission that the levy has created an unfair market marks a refreshing departure from this pervasive malaise.

Rajeev Pant: Prime Bank CEO on why the lender bets on small firms

For many banks, lending to small businesses is always seen as a risky affair. But Prime Bank, now with three decades of betting on small businesses, explains how it finds the sweet spot in an area where many large banks have struggled.

Prime Bank CEO Rajeev Pant spoke to Business Daily about the power of consistency, specialisation, staying close to customers and avoiding risky bets, and how this has offered a formula to keep loan default rates at below three percent against the banking sector’s over 17 percent.

Kenya lacks discipline to spend within its means

After Parliament approved the plan to sell 65 percent of the government stake in Kenya Pipeline Company (KPC), the deal now looks like a foregone conclusion. The National Treasury expects to raise approximately Sh100 billion from the transaction.

The language used by officials to frame the policy is telling. This is not ‘privatisation’ in the ideological sense of rolling back the frontiers of the state. Instead, it is described as ‘liability management;-a tool to raise cash, restructure the balance sheet, and contain public debt. The narrative is that Kenya is not selling assets out of conviction but out of necessity.

Retirees seek StanChart parent regulator’s help in pension row

A group of former Standard Chartered Bank Kenya (SCBK) employees have asked the UK’s financial services regulator to compel the lender’s British parent to act on their claims for past undervalued pensions, citing frustration in their engagement with the Kenyan subsidiary.

The group numbering 325 is seeking pension on the same terms as the 629 former workers who recently won a Supreme Court case affirming a Retirement Benefits Appeals Tribunal (RBAT) award against the lender for their dues estimated at about Sh7 billion.

Saccos swap Sh660m claims into shares of Kuscco insurer

Eighteen saccos have converted Sh660 million worth of claims in Kuscco Mutual Assurance Limited (KMAL) into an undisclosed stake in the entity ahead of the planned sale of a majority ownership in the Kenya Union of Savings and Credit Co-operatives Ltd (Kuscco)-owned insurer.

Kusccco managing director Arnold Munene said in an interview the sealing of a deal to dispose of a key stake of Kuscco Mutual Assurance to strategic investors is likely to conclude in November and saccos have been supporting this through the claims-to-equity transactions.

Judge backs manager fired on allegations of witchcraft, awards Sh3m

The Employment and Labour Relations Court has nullified the sacking of a company manager on allegations of practising witchcraft and failing to respond to text messages from her supervisor, ruling the dismissal violated statutory procedures.

While voiding the termination, the court cited the employer’s failure to produce written termination charges, proof of disciplinary hearing notices, and verification of witchcraft claims.

Future of Africa lies in shaping youth creativity and resilience

Africa’s youth have, over the years, been referred to as the continent’s untapped potential. This framing is common in reports and political speeches in Kenya, where 85 percent of the population is below the age of 35.

However, the truth is that young Africans do not stand on the fringes. They are already creating the future, innovating technologies, disrupting industries, and driving social change.

What is now needed is a strong commitment to ensuring that the youth have the environment and resources needed to tap into their power, a commitment that African governments must make now.

So how do we unlock this power?

There are key elements that must be unpacked, no matter how uncomfortable they make us. It is in this discomfort that we can start to actualise Africa’s great future. It is paramount that the trust deficit between citizens in multiple African countries and their governments is addressed first.

We cannot build on a rocky foundation, and the youth, especially, do not trust their governments. This trust will be rebuilt on the delivery of services, on an accountability that honours enquiries from the youth instead of punishing them when they demand a just government.

Governments must start seeing the youth as capable partners in building Africa’s future and solving global problems.

A testament to this is Wawira Njiru. At just 21, she founded Food for Education, which ensures students get access to nutritious meals at school. Their work is efficient and leverages technology, too. She has gone from serving 25 students to serving 500,000 children daily across Kenya. The schools she supports have seen a 27 percent increase in enrolment.

Additionally, national policies must not only incorporate youth insights but must have a tangible impact today. Youth representation in government is key in this and must be harnessed from a young age. A key example that can be borrowed is that of the Liberian Children’s Parliament, now known as the Liberian National Children’s Representative Forum.

This space ensured children across Liberia were not just represented in national governance issues, but got to interact with leadership organs in government. It also gave rise to the youth leaders Africa needs, like the powerful human rights activist Satta Fatumata Sheriff, a dynamic young Liberian changemaker. Satta is making a real-time impact in Liberia today.

Another uncomfortable truth we must face is that we are at the beginning of the end of funding as we’ve known it. African governments must wake up, clamp down on corruption, bridge commercial alliances with each other, and begin to leverage domestic revenue.

Without prioritising this, we will not have the autonomy or sustainability needed to ensure that African youth can realise their potential.

The future of Africa isn’t on a distant horizon; it is unfolding right now. Every day, the youth of this continent are actively creating it. The world must catch up.

Why the world must pay attention

While income gaps in Africa are often discussed, age gaps between leaders and their people present an opportunity to discuss what a brighter African future should look like.

It is against this background that the Future of Africa Podcast, which I have the pleasure of co-hosting, was created. The podcast was developed to amplify African voices participating in global discourses and also align with generational views.

Each episode is a moderated, intergenerational conversation featuring a youthful changemaker alongside an elder statesperson or thought leader, ensuring a true exchange of ideas across generations.

It is a seven-episode series, with each episode bridging local experiences and global policy debates. The most inspirational idea to me is the nature in which the podcast reinvents youth not as passive beneficiaries of development, but as active creators of the future of Africa.

Moving from potential to power

To unlock the youth potential, there is a need to transform education systems to incorporate digital literacy, green economy, and entrepreneurial skills.

Youth-led ventures should also be funded. It is also crucial to provide the youth with a place at the decision table and make their voices heard on the policies that have direct influence on their lives and ambitions.

Governments, investors, and global partners face a crucial challenge: It’s time to move beyond discussing potential and start investing in these empowered individuals.

Sweet business venture: Beehive maker turns shortage into Sh3m monthly earnings

For years, with its low operating costs and strong profit margins, Joseph Karuga’s beekeeping and honey aggregating venture was a sweet business.

He was a happy entrepreneur. Then, as demand grew, shortages and unreliable supply left him frustrated – until he decided to build the solution himself.