The Rhino Charge competition,
which supports the activities of the Rhino Ark Kenya Charitable Trust, has
received KES 15 million sponsorship from telecommunication company Safaricom.
M-PESA Foundation has also
committed to supporting the restoration of Kakamega Forest through the Rhino Ark Kenya
Charitable Trust and its partners who aim to raise funds to preserve our
ecosystems, bio-diversity, and livelihoods through environmental conservation.
This year’s competition will
take place on 3rd June in Laikipia County. The event has
attracted a field of 65 rally drivers, with legendary Kenyan rally driver Ian
Duncan and his team ‘KTM Cruisers’ expected to take part in the competition. Other
notable drivers taking part in the challenge include defending champion Sean
Avery with his Car No 38 (Bundufundi), Peter Kinyua of Car No 23, Adil Khawaja
of Car No 44, Eddy Verbeek of Car No. 1, Ravi Patel of Frying Squad, and John
Bowden of Gumtree 4X4 Car 9 among others.

“As a business, we are
committed to becoming a net zero-emitting company by 2050. To achieve this, we
have several initiatives in place including a plan to plant five million trees
across the country by 2025 in partnership with Kenya Forest Service (KFS),
which we estimate will offset 26% of our emissions. The KES 15 million
sponsorship further reaffirms our unwavering support for the annual Rhino
Charge competition. Part of this sponsorship will support Car No.44 led by Adil
Khawaja,” said Mr. Peter Ndegwa, Safaricom CEO.
Safaricom continues to
collaborate with other entities to find long-term, sustainable solutions to the
conservation issues faced by mountain forest ecosystems and other regions of
important biodiversity.

So far in partnership with
local communities and Kenya Forest Services (KFS), Safaricom has planted 1.3
million trees, and restored 1,300 ha of degraded government forests land since
2018 across the country.
The company also recently signed a collaboration
framework with Kenya Forest Services geared towards growing five
million trees in public forest reserves through an
‘adopt-a-forest’ strategy. The framework commits to the reforestation,
protection, and conservation of 5,000 hectares to support efforts of achieving
30% national forest cover.
By: Kanto Okanta