G20 GLI National Pilot in Kenya: Unlocking the Power of Youth Ecopreneurs

Author: Fabiola Nava, UNCCD/G20 GLI Youth Engagement Consultant   |   June 26, 2025

A young woman holds a lettuce in a greenhouse

Youth ecopreneurs are leading the charge in land restoration—turning degraded landscapes into green opportunities through innovation and collaboration.
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This July, the G20 Global Land Initiative (GLI) launches its Kenya National Engagement Pilot to strengthen youth-led land restoration and green entrepreneurship at the national level.

Kenya offers a unique convergence of opportunity: over 30% of land is degraded, yet the country is home to a rapidly growing startup scene and a youth population rich in potential. With 53% of Kenyans under 20, the future of land restoration lies in the hands of its young innovators.

This national pilot focuses on building a robust ecosystem that can support youth ecopreneurs in regenerative agriculture, nature-based solutions, and land-based business models. Through close collaboration with local actors, the Kenya pilot aims to:

  • Provide catalytic support to early-stage, land-linked entrepreneurs 
  • Strengthen connections across government, business support organizations (BSOs), and accelerators

The agenda of the kick-off visit includes high-level meetings, field visits, lectures and roundtables with leading incubators, innovation hubs, universities and restoration-focused networks, such as the Kenya Climate Innovation Center, SNV Kenya, Afrilabs, E4Impact Entrepreneurship Center, and YILAA, to name a few, to identify opportunities for deeper alignment and to strengthen local efforts.

Among the highlights of the week are two special engagements designed to connect directly with student entrepreneurs and early-stage startups:

  • “From the Ground Up: A Roundtable with Kenya’s Ecopreneurs” – Exploring Business, Restoration & Innovation with E4Impact
    An interactive roundtable designed as a listening session and learning dialogue with ecopreneurs already building solutions from the ground up — including Martina Sikawa of Chemolex (YECO alumni 2024), a youth ecopreneur leading local innovation in restoration and circular economy.
  • “Restoration Is the New Innovation”
    A guest lecture with students, which will explore youth innovation and entrepreneurship in the restoration economy.

If you’re a student, startup founder, or young innovator — we’d love to see you there.

This pilot represents the  national implementation track of GLI’s dual strategy. Kenya is where we begin to test, at a national level, the scale, systems and real-world delivery of youth-led restoration economies.

Follow our journey on the ground. Kenya is not just ready for restoration — it’s ready to lead.