Tens of leading Japanese companies target investment opportunities at Tatu City SEZ




Tatu City, Kenya’s first operational mixed-use Special Economic Zone, hosted a high-profile Japanese delegation led by the Japan Ministry of Foreign Affairs, featuring representatives from 25 top companies in Japan. The delegation, which also visited Tanzania, is in Kenya to explore opportunities for investment and collaboration in Kenya’s Special Economic Zones (SEZs).

The delegation, comprising 40 company executives, represented diverse business sectors, including manufacturing, technology and innovation, automotive and machinery, renewable energy, healthcare, agriculture, finance and banking, and infrastructure development. The breadth of expertise reflects Japan’s commitment to fostering economic partnerships that align with Kenya’s development goals and the strategic role of SEZs in driving economic growth.

(TOP: L-R – Preston Mendenhal, Group COO, Country Head, Kenya, Rendeavour; Tatsunori, Senior Regional Cordinator, Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Japan; Stephen Jennings, founder and CEO, Rendevour; and Solomon Mahinda, Executive).

“Tatu City is honoured to host this distinguished delegation from Japan. As Kenya’s flagship Special Economic Zone and Rendeavour’s pioneer city in Africa, we provide a world-class platform for global businesses to thrive, with unparalleled infrastructure, streamlined processes, and a vibrant community. The interest from these leading Japanese corporations underscores the immense potential of SEZs in Kenya as gateways to regional and global markets,” said Preston Mendenhall, Group COO, Rendeavour and Country Head, Tatu City.

“Japanese companies are highly interested in doing business in Kenya. Indeed, Kenya is ranked number one among African countries in a survey of Japanese companies’ interest,” said Tatsunori Ishida, Senior Regional Coordinator, Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Japan.

The delegation toured several businesses thriving within Tatu City, including CCI Global, a 5,000-seat call center in Tatu Central, the business and living district of the city. In Tatu Industrial Park, the delegation visited Freight Forwarders Solutions, an end-to-end logistics services company covering East and Central Africa, Dormans Coffee, a premier coffee roaster and exporter representing Kenya’s rich coffee heritage and Dr. Mattress, East Africa’s pioneer of mattress and furniture technologies.

At Tatu City mixed-use SEZ, 88 companies are operational or under development, employing over 25,000 people and representing over KES 400 billion of investment. These investments come from groups based in Kenya, China, the United States, the United Kingdom, Norway, New Zealand, Switzerland, Spain, Germany, The Netherlands, and South Africa, as well as international funding organisations such as the International Finance Corporation, British International Investment, Soros Fund for Economic Development, Finnfund, Grand Challenges Canada and the U.S. International Development Finance Corporation.

Tatu City is a flagship Vision 2030 private sector development and a Special Planning Area. Tatu City is designated as a project of Strategic National Importance pursuant to the Physical and Land Use Planning (Classification of Strategic and Inter-County Projects) Regulations, 2019.

Tatu City is a 5,000-acre new city on Nairobi’s doorstep with homes, schools, businesses, a shopping district, a medical clinic, nature areas and recreation for more than 250,000 residents and tens of thousands of day visitors. Tatu City’s schools educate thousands of students daily, and a range of homes suits all incomes and businesses that thrive in the country’s first operational Special Economic Zone. Located 30 minutes from Westlands, Tatu City represents a new way of living and thinking for all Kenyans in a live, work and play environment that is free from traffic congestion and long-distance commuting.

Tatu City is a development by Rendeavour, Africa’s largest new city builder with 30,000 acres of visionary projects in growth trajectories across Ghana, Nigeria, Kenya, Zambia and the DRC.

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