Photos for Trees Kenya🌳

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Photos for Trees Kenya🌳

Photos for Trees Kenya🌳

@PhotosForTrees

Photos of Kenya for sale (DM for prices) to help https://t.co/hDGQLa87v8 grow more trees🌳

Kenya Katılım Ağustos 2014
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Empire: World History
Empire: World History@EmpirePodUK·
🚨 NEW EPISODE 🚨 Chairman Mao: The Cultural Revolution 🔥 Why did Mao unleash chaos across China? 🧑‍🎓 Who were the Red Guards and why target the young? @DalrympleWill & @tweeter_anita are joined by Rana Mitter to explore Mao’s final years… and much more. Link below 👇
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Bad Hombre
Bad Hombre@Askumo254·
@xysist @MidoCollins Hi Collo. Is there a way we can check older maps of the city and establish which public facilities and riparian reserves were taken up by faith based organizations in the 80s and 90s? I have a few in mind but I'm sure a map would showcase many more
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FERDINAND OMONDI
FERDINAND OMONDI@FerdyOmondi·
Now. My turn. The real question no pro-nuclear voice will answer: 1. How will you guarantee Lake Victoria stays safe for 50+ years? 2. Where’s the waste going SPECIFICALLY? 3. How do you keep tariffs affordable when nuclear costs balloon? 4. Why not geothermal first (we’re world leaders) before this nuclear roulette? I’m waiting for those answers. Until then, the bots can rage all they want.
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FERDINAND OMONDI
FERDINAND OMONDI@FerdyOmondi·
My post on the economic risks and dangers of nuclear power in Siaya has sparked a firestorm. Good. That’s exactly what we needed. I also notice the affordable bloggers have piled on, which is fantastic. It means my message reached their bosses. But here’s the thing: none of them is offering even a shallow argument for why Kenya needs a 2,000MW nuclear gamble on Lake Victoria. What I’m seeing instead are 3 regurgitated talking points: 1. "Nuclear energy is clean" 2. "We need this to develop first" (with bonus: "We cannot develop with solar") 3. Fukushima was ages ago, we have new tech, IAEA will monitor, etc., etc Let me debunk these one by one in today’s thread. Because if we’re serious about Kenya’s energy future, we need facts and clarity.
FERDINAND OMONDI@FerdyOmondi

Kenya’s rush into a 2,000MW nuclear plant in Siaya is a historic mistake in the making – economically, environmentally, and strategically. First, context. Kenya already gets about 85–90% of its electricity from clean sources: geothermal, hydro, wind and increasingly solar. We are a global poster child for clean power without nuclear. Our main challenge isn’t a lack of clean options. We aren’t planning and using what we have well enough. So why gamble billions on the most complex, riskiest option on the menu? A single 2,000MW nuclear plant is one of the largest, most expensive projects in our history. These plants are notorious for cost overruns and delays in far richer, more technically advanced countries. If it runs late (very likely) or goes over budget (almost guaranteed), someone has to pay. That “someone” is Kenyan taxpayers and electricity consumers. We risk locking ourselves into decades of high tariffs or more public debt to service a mega‑project we didn’t actually need. Meanwhile, the opportunity cost is massive. For the same money, Kenya could add thousands of megawatts of geothermal, wind and solar across multiple counties, plus storage and transmission to stabilise the grid. Geothermal alone, in the Rift Valley, can provide 24/7 baseload power without importing fuel – and we’ve already shown we know how to do it. Wind in Turkana, solar in the north and east, small hydro, battery storage: these are proven, modular, quicker to build, and spread economic benefits more widely than one giant plant in Siaya. Then there’s the risk profile. Nuclear accidents are rare, but when they go wrong, they go very wrong and last for generations. Putting a first‑ever nuclear plant on Lake Victoria, which supports millions of people across several countries, is a huge regional gamble. Even “minor” incidents or perceived risk can devastate fisheries, tourism, and local livelihoods. Radioactive waste is a 100‑year question in a political system that struggles to manage five‑year projects without scandal. Do we really trust our current institutions to run a flawless nuclear safety culture for the next century? Governance is the elephant in the room. Nuclear is the kind of project that attracts opaque deals, expensive foreign contractors, complex technology transfer promises, and huge procurement contracts. In a country where big infrastructure routinely raises questions about corruption and value for money, adding nuclear’s complexity is like pouring petrol on a smouldering fire. Once we sign, we are locked in – to a vendor, to a technology, to a repayment schedule – regardless of how our economy or technology options evolve. Strategically, it also makes little sense. The world is moving towards flexible, distributed, renewables‑heavy systems supported by storage and smart grids. Nuclear is the opposite: big, centralised, inflexible units that must run almost all the time to be economical. On a grid like Kenya’s, where demand is still growing and industrialisation is uneven, dropping 2,000MW of inflexible baseload can actually complicate balancing, especially when we add more variable wind and solar. We risk building a system that is technically elegant on paper but financially and operationally brittle in reality. Kenya’s climate and geography give us an embarrassment of renewable riches: untapped geothermal reservoirs, some of the best wind regimes on the continent, abundant solar irradiation, and room for regional power trade. Instead of doubling down on what works and scaling it smartly, we are flirting with the most capital‑intensive, politically risky, institution‑demanding technology available. It’s like bypassing a field full of ripe maize to plant a single, exotic crop we’ve never grown before, which only matures if the weather is perfect for 20 years. If our goal is cheap, reliable, climate‑friendly power that supports jobs and industry, the answer is to go deeper on what we’re already good at: – Aggressively expand geothermal as firm baseload. – Add more wind and solar, especially near demand centres. – Invest in storage, transmission, and regional interconnectors. – Fix governance, planning, and utility finances so that Kenyans actually feel the benefit on their bills. Nuclear might have a place someday in a much larger, richer, more industrialised Kenya with rock‑solid institutions. But right now, when we are already at 85%+ clean power and sitting on huge untapped renewable potential, a 2,000MW nuclear plant is not visionary at all. It’s a high‑risk distraction. Our focus should be on making Kenya the first truly renewables‑powered industrial economy in Africa, not a test case for big nuclear on Lake Victoria.

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Photos for Trees Kenya🌳
Photos for Trees Kenya🌳@PhotosForTrees·
@FOMAWA also if you would ever like any seedballs to try direct seeding with please reach out to 0700380009 - there is Olea, Acacia Abyssinca and Sesbania for livestock forage and firewood that would do well there
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Friends of Mau Watershed (FOMAWA)
@PhotosForTrees Definitely. Indigenous fruit trees are a FOMAWA priority. We supply famous varieties based on the specific needs of communities bordering the Mau. We’re currently gathering requests for our next sustainable planting phase.
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Friends of Mau Watershed (FOMAWA)
24th February 2026 , Gogar Farms – Rongai, Nakuru County FOMAWA staff rolled up their sleeves and planted fruit trees at our office premises in Gogar Farms as part of our ongoing commitment to ecosystem restoration and sustainable land use.
Friends of Mau Watershed (FOMAWA) tweet mediaFriends of Mau Watershed (FOMAWA) tweet mediaFriends of Mau Watershed (FOMAWA) tweet mediaFriends of Mau Watershed (FOMAWA) tweet media
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Friends of Mau Watershed (FOMAWA)
By integrating fruit trees into our workspace, we are promoting food security, enhancing biodiversity, and creating a greener, more resilient environment starting right at home.
Friends of Mau Watershed (FOMAWA) tweet mediaFriends of Mau Watershed (FOMAWA) tweet mediaFriends of Mau Watershed (FOMAWA) tweet mediaFriends of Mau Watershed (FOMAWA) tweet media
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James Hall
James Hall@hallaboutafrica·
Just don't have them around the house. On today's World Termite Day, saluting termites for their important and beneficial contributions to forest and ecosystem health. Pic: Termite mound in Tanzania. (Re humans: Termites cause $5billion in property damage annually in U.S. alone)
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Photos for Trees Kenya🌳
Photos for Trees Kenya🌳@PhotosForTrees·
@AnganaKeith The old adage of loosening the belt to cure a pot belly always comes to mind with more lanes. The next hurdle is the parking conundrum as the late and great @DonaldShoup studied
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Keith Ang'ana
Keith Ang'ana@AnganaKeith·
In today’s Business Daily, I wrote about why increasing the number of lanes on a road (or building an expressway) does the exact opposite of reducing congestion on the road, since it leads to induced demand. Each road, instead, should have its problems assessed individually.
Keith Ang'ana tweet media
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