Private, public stakeholders partner to leverage technology for innovation
State Department for Science, Research and Innovation PS Prof. Shaukat Abdulrazak speaks during a capacity-building training on mainstreaming STI in Naivasha. PHOTO | COURTESY
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Private and public sector stakeholders are increasingly partnering to harness science, technology, and innovation (STI) as a driver of economic growth, efficiency, and competitiveness.
Speaking during a
capacity-building training on mainstreaming STI held in Naivasha, Principal
Secretary for the State Department for Science, Research and Innovation, Prof.
Shaukat Abdulrazak underscored the need to break institutional silos and
strengthen collaboration across sectors.
“We have been
talking about how we can bridge the gap from 0.8 per cent all the way
progressively to two percent of GDP,” Prof. Abdulrazak said.
“But the bottom
line is to break silos, build synergies, build collaboration, and create
centers of excellence so that we can be a fast-world-status country using
science, technology, and innovation.”
The PS noted that
the Science, Technology and Innovation Act provides the framework for embedding
research, science, and innovation into national production systems, public
sector programmes, and service delivery in line with Kenya’s Vision 2030.
He cited the STI
Mainstreaming Performance Contract indicator as a key milestone, saying it has
expanded reporting by Ministries, Departments and Agencies (MDAs) from 200 in
2020/21 to 324 in the current cycle, generating critical data for
evidence-based decision-making and global benchmarking, including the Global
Innovation Index.
However, Prof.
Abdulrazak warned that Kenya’s investment in research and development remains
low at about 0.82 percent of GDP.
“We must be able
to collect adequate, reliable and correct data,” he said. “This data allows us
to appreciate the human resources we have developed through innovation, both in
the public and private sectors, and to inform our long-term strategy.”
He emphasized that
innovation is not the responsibility of government alone, noting that
collaboration with the private sector, academia and civil society is essential
to drive sustainable innovation, improve service delivery and enhance Kenya’s
global competitiveness.

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