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Govt Plans to Monetise eCitizen Data in New Revenue Drive

The public participation window for the draft policy closed on June 5, with implementation expected to begin as early as July.

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Kenyans seek services at a Huduma centre. Regularisation of the eCitizen project, which has been in operation since December 2014.

Nairobi, June 8, 2026 — The government is seeking to transform the vast volumes of data generated through eCitizen and other state digital platforms into a new source of revenue, unveiling plans for a national marketplace where anonymised and aggregated public datasets would be sold to businesses, researchers, innovators and development organisations.

The proposal is contained in the draft National Data Governance Policy, which seeks to establish a National Data Governance and Emerging Technologies Council charged with overseeing the collection, management and commercialisation of government-held data.

Under the plan, the State aims to make at least 1,000 datasets available over the next five years through a centralised marketplace expected to cost about Sh396 million to develop and operate.

The datasets would be drawn from eCitizen and other government systems and could include trends in business registrations, demand for public services, passport and immigration applications, birth and death registrations, vehicle registrations, land transactions, agricultural production statistics and regional traffic patterns. Information from agencies such as the Kenya National Bureau of Statistics would also be incorporated.

Government officials argue that the initiative is part of a broader effort to treat data as a strategic national asset capable of driving innovation, investment and economic growth.

The policy maintains that personal information will not be sold. Officials say names, phone numbers, email addresses, national identity numbers and photographs will be excluded from the marketplace in compliance with the Data Protection Act. Instead, only anonymised and aggregated datasets would be licensed to users under pricing structures that are yet to be finalised. Some information may also be made available free of charge for research and public-interest purposes.

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The government points to examples from other jurisdictions where public-sector data has become a significant economic resource. Policymakers argue that Kenya could position itself as a continental leader in the emerging data economy while creating new revenue streams without imposing additional taxes on citizens.

Yet the proposal arrives amid lingering questions about public trust in eCitizen itself.

Over the past several years, reports by the Auditor-General and investigations by parliamentary committees have raised concerns about the management of the platform. Audits uncovered irregular transactions, unexplained financial discrepancies, unauthorised accounts and weaknesses in oversight arrangements. The platform’s operational structure, particularly the involvement of private contractors, has repeatedly come under scrutiny from lawmakers.

Those concerns have resurfaced following the government’s proposal to commercialise data generated through the same system.

Many Kenyans reacting online have questioned whether the State should be selling insights derived from citizens’ interactions with government services when confidence in the platform remains fragile. Critics argue that millions of people have little choice but to use eCitizen for essential services ranging from tax payments and business registrations to education and healthcare transactions.

Some users have urged the government to prioritise strengthening cybersecurity, improving transparency and resolving accountability concerns before embarking on data monetisation.

Privacy advocates have also warned that anonymisation is not always foolproof. International experience has shown that individuals can sometimes be re-identified when multiple datasets are combined, particularly in cases involving small geographic regions or highly specific transaction patterns.

Such concerns are likely to place additional pressure on the Office of the Data Protection Commissioner, which already faces the challenge of regulating an increasingly complex digital ecosystem.

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The draft policy also promotes a “once-only” principle under which citizens would provide information to government a single time, allowing authorised agencies to access and share that data across systems. Supporters argue that the approach would improve efficiency and reduce duplication. Critics counter that it could increase risks by concentrating vast amounts of information within interconnected government databases.

Questions are also emerging about governance.

The proposed National Data Governance and Emerging Technologies Council would wield significant influence over decisions involving data access, pricing, licensing and approved users. Stakeholders are seeking clarity on how the body will be constituted, who will oversee its operations and what safeguards will exist to ensure transparency and public accountability.

The public participation window for the draft policy closed on June 5, with implementation expected to begin as early as July.

The proposal has reignited a broader debate about ownership and value in the digital age. While few dispute that government-held data can support innovation, improve planning and stimulate economic activity, critics argue that trust must come before commercialisation.

For many observers, the central question is not whether data has economic value, but whether the government has demonstrated sufficient transparency, accountability and technical safeguards to manage that value responsibly.

Until those concerns are addressed, the plan risks being viewed less as a bold digital transformation strategy and more as another attempt to extract revenue from a platform that millions of Kenyans are already required to use.

The government’s challenge now is to convince citizens that the data economy it seeks to build will serve the public interest rather than become another source of controversy in Kenya’s increasingly contested digital landscape.

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This version is cleaner, more balanced, legally safer, and reads like a professional newspaper analysis while retaining the controversy and public-interest angle.


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