Business

NEMA Stops KSh150 Fee, Reviews EPR Rules

On June 25, 2026, Kenya’s National Environment Management Authority ordered an immediate halt to the Extended Producer Responsibility fee collection framework. Specifically, NEMA Director General Mamo B. Mamo directed the Kenya Producer Responsibility Organisation to stop the current non-compliant model and build a restructured one from scratch.

Furthermore, the directive targets the heavily criticised Ksh150 flat import fee charged per packaging item regardless of size, weight or recyclability.


Why the Flat Fee Failed

The existing model drew criticism from manufacturers, courts and regulators alike. Specifically, NEMA confirmed the flat-rate model violates the core objectives of the Sustainable Waste Management EPR Regulations 2024.

Furthermore, local manufacturers successfully petitioned the High Court, which suspended the rules after finding the flat fee ignored product-specific realities. Additionally, opponents argued the model gave producers zero incentive to develop more sustainable, eco-friendly packaging solutions.

NEMA
An image of NEMA Officials in a field work in March 11, 2020. Photo/ NEMA Kenya

What Happens Next

NEMA has given KEPRO a clear rebuilding mandate. Specifically, KEPRO must convene an urgent multi-stakeholder validation workshop bringing together manufacturers, importers and waste value chain players.

Furthermore, the workshop must produce a tiered, compliant fee structure that supports waste collection, transportation and recycling without crippling local businesses.


Why Every Kenyan Should Care

This issue directly affects consumer prices. Specifically, industry players across alcohol and hygiene manufacturing warned that the old flat fee could trigger up to a 16 percent price surge on essential consumer goods.

Therefore, building a fairer, tiered system protects both environmental goals and the wallets of everyday Kenyans.

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