Today’s ESG Brief | Kenya | Africa
Tuesday, 23 June 2026
Sustainability Review
NEWS / Environment

Water Resilience Is the Next Investor Question for African Business

Water risk touches factories, farms, real estate, energy, mining, hospitality and cities. Companies need plans before scarcity becomes a balance-sheet problem.

By Paul Wafula | June 23, 2026 | Environment
Share
inXfWA

At a glance

• Climate, water, land-use and energy decisions are moving into boardroom risk discussions.
• The strongest companies will connect environmental exposure to finance, operations and strategy.
• The weak point remains evidence: data, baselines and verification.

Water is becoming financial risk

Water risk is often treated as an environmental issue, but it quickly becomes financial. Shortages can stop production, raise costs, damage community relations and delay projects. Flooding can destroy assets and disrupt supply chains.

For investors, water resilience is a practical question: can this business operate reliably under stress?

Why this matters

Water risk touches factories, farms, real estate, energy, mining, hospitality and cities. Companies need plans before scarcity becomes a balance-sheet problem.

The exposure is wider than agriculture

Agriculture is obviously water-dependent, but the issue extends far beyond farms. Factories need process water. Real estate needs reliable supply and drainage. Hotels depend on service continuity. Energy projects can face cooling or hydrology constraints. Cities need infrastructure that can handle both scarcity and excess rainfall.

A company that does not understand its water exposure is underestimating operational risk.

Measurement comes first

Companies should know where water comes from, how much they use, where losses occur, what quality is required and what happens during shortage. Without measurement, conservation claims are weak.

Water stewardship also requires understanding the wider catchment. A business can be efficient internally and still face risk if the surrounding system is stressed.

Community relations matter

Water competition can create tension between companies and communities. Businesses must be careful not to appear secure while neighbours struggle. Shared infrastructure, transparent communication and responsible abstraction are essential.

Water is local. Reputation risk can escalate quickly when communities feel excluded.

What to fix first

Build a water risk map by site. Identify critical operations, alternative supply options, efficiency projects, drainage exposure and community issues. Then link the plan to capital expenditure. Water resilience cannot remain a paragraph in a report.

Questions for the boardroom

Who owns this risk at board and management level?
What evidence would satisfy an external assurer or investor?
Which part of the strategy, budget or operating model changes because of this issue?

Sign up to Sustainability Review Briefing

Get weekly ESG, climate risk and reporting intelligence for boards, executives and advisers.

Subscribe

Reports & Data

Use the reports desk for explainers, disclosure guides and market-readiness notes.

View Reports
  • × Close

    Sections

    Home
    Browse this editorial desk.
    Environment
    Browse this editorial desk.
    Social
    Browse this editorial desk.
    Governance
    Browse this editorial desk.
    ESG Watch
    Browse this editorial desk.
    Data Desk
    Browse this editorial desk.
    Opinion
    Browse this editorial desk.
    Reports
    Browse this editorial desk.

    Reporting

    IFRS S1 readiness
    Mandatory disclosure readiness for listed issuers.
    IFRS S2 climate risk
    Climate disclosure, emissions and assurance.
    Assurance watch
    Audit, governance and evidence trails.
    Scope 3 discipline
    Supplier and value-chain emissions data.

    Latest Briefs

    The clock is ticking: Kenya's listed firms prepare for mandatory sustainability reporting regime
    With mandatory climate and sustainability disclosures less than seven months away, Nairobi's…
    Stanbic Bets on Green Finance as ESG Risks Reshape East Africa's Banking Sector
    Lender channels KSh133 billion into trade while ramping up climate finance, affordable housi…
    The 5 Key ESG Risks Facing Yas as Telecoms Networks Become Climate Infrastructure
    A dramatic telecom tower is not only a technology symbol. It is now a test of climate exposu…
    Green Factories Are Moving From Nice-to-Have to Competitive Advantage
    Manufacturers that treat sustainability as decoration will lose ground to firms that cut ene…

    For Professionals

    Subscribe
    Weekly ESG intelligence and boardroom-ready summaries.
    Publish with us
    Submit expert commentary, research notes or partner content.
    Reports
    Special collections and reference material.
    Contact
    Editorial, commercial and corrections desk.

    Start here: Kenya’s mandatory sustainability reporting shift

    Read the lead story