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    Home » Solar-Powered sips: How Coca-Cola is rewriting the industrial playbook in Kenya
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    Solar-Powered sips: How Coca-Cola is rewriting the industrial playbook in Kenya

    Adeyemi MuseBy Adeyemi MuseApril 27, 2026No Comments4 Mins Read2 Views
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    Coca-Cola Beverages Africa (CCBA) has officially inaugurated a 4-megawatt (MW) solar power project in Kenya, marking a significant shift in the industrial landscape of East Africa towards sustainable manufacturing.

    It is also one of the largest investments in renewable energy of the high manufacturing footprint of the brand this year, which was intended to decarbonize the brand.

    The project is strategically divided into two key bottling centers of CCBA which include a 2.1MW system, which is already operational in the Embaksi plant in Nairobi and a 1.9MW plant in the Kisumu plant.

    The combination of these systems offers a reliable energy backbone that is clean and safe to produce some of the most well-known beverage brands in the world.

    The Power Purchase Agreement (PPA) Strategy.

    The unique feature of this rollout that makes it particularly professional is its financial architecture. CCBA implemented this project through a partnership with BE Africa on the basis of a Power Purchase Agreement (PPA).

    This is quickly turning out to be the new gold standard of multinational companies in the emerging markets as it addresses the issue of upfront cost.

    BE Africa in this structure manages the total capital expenditure (CAPEX) in installation, maintenance and technical operations. CCBA, on its part, just pays the power it produces at a predetermined rate which is lower than the grid rate.

    This Energy-as-a-Service model will enable the manufacturer to pursue its sustainability objectives without using capital on its efforts to grow and expand its main bottling and distributing enterprises.

    Read here: The new industrial crisis facing South Africa

    Technical Resilience: More Than the Carbon Footprint.

    As much as the positive environmental effects are apparent, it is also a strategic move to gain operational resilience. Even with the large share of renewable energy sources such as geothermal, the national grid in Kenya is still subject to pricing and reliability fluctuations. Integrating 4 MW of on-site solar, CCBA will be insuring its production lines against a number of major risks:

    • Grid Fluctuations: Light-speed bottling lines are very susceptible to power spikes and interruptions. Solar offers a predictable, steady voltage in the daytime.
    • Peak Tariff Costs: In Kenya, daytime rates of industrial electricity tend to be the highest. On-site solar enables the plants to shave their peaks which greatly lowers their highest bills of energy.
    • Carbon Compliance: With the world supply chains narrowing ESG (Environmental, Social and Governance) demands, this action will make the beverages produced in Kenya to match the international low-carbon standards.

    The World Without Waste Integration.

    This solar commission is not a one-off event but a strategic implementation of Coca-Cola’s global strategy of World Without Waste. The company has also established ambitious goals to cut down greenhouse gas emissions in its total value chain by 25% by 2026.

    The Kenya project is a pilot of Green Manufacturing Hubs in Africa. The industry insiders say that the success of the Embaksi and Kisumu plants is already being relied upon in order to write the blueprints of similar solar-integrated plants in Ethiopia and Tanzania.

    By transforming the attic areas of the giant bottling facilities into effective power resources, CCBA is demonstrating that scale and environmental responsibility are no longer opposing concepts.

    This shift is indicative of a larger trend observed at the Intersolar Africa 2026 in Nairobi, where industry leaders stressed that energy storage and distributed solar are no longer in a supportive role, but rather a necessity in making grids reliable in commercial and industrial sectors.

    In the case of CCBA, the 4-megawatt implementation is an indication of a viable transition to cleaner production and strengthening Kenya as a major market in integrating renewable energy in corporate activities.

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    Adeyemi Muse

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