Borehole drilling in Turkana County is typically more expensive than in many other parts of Kenya because of a combination of logistical, geological, and operational factors that push the per‑metre rate higher.
Long distance and poor access
One of the biggest reasons drilling costs more in Turkana is distance and rough terrain. Many sites are far from major towns, with poor or unpaved roads, so rigs, fuel, and materials must cover long distances over difficult ground. This dramatically increases:
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Mobilisation and transport fees to move heavy drilling rigs and casing.
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Fuel and standby time because rigs move slowly and may need to wait for road conditions or security approval.
Several drilling‑cost tables for Kenya list Turkana with a per‑metre drilling range of about KSh 8,000–9,500, higher than softer‑soil counties like Machakos or Kitui, where the rate is closer to KSh 6,500–7,000 per metre.
Hard and deep‑rock geology
Turkana’s subsurface often includes hard rock, fractured formations, and deep aquifers, which slow down drilling and wear out equipment faster. In these conditions:
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Rigs must work longer hours to reach water, increasing labour and fuel costs.
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Drilling rigs and drill bits experience more wear, so contractors factor in higher per‑metre rates to cover repairs and replacements.
When the water table is deep (often 100–200 m or more), the bore must be drilled, cased, and tested over a much greater length, pushing the total project bill well above projects in shallow‑aquifer regions.
Remote‑site operational overhead
Drilling in remote Turkana locations introduces extra “hidden” costs that are smaller in urban counties:
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Crew and equipment standby charges while waiting for approvals, visas for security‑sensitive areas, or favourable weather.
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Local security and permits, especially near borders or oil‑exploration zones, which can delay schedules and add to daily costs.
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Logistics for water, power, and camping for the drilling team, since basic services are limited.
Many contractors treat these as part of the per‑metre rate or mobilisation fee, rather than listing them separately, so the headline price per metre already reflects the remote‑site premium.
Market‑driven per‑metre rates in Turkana
Price‑guides for Kenyan boreholes consistently show that Turkana sits at the upper end of the drilling‑cost spectrum:
This means that for the same depth, a borehole in Turkana will usually cost more than an equivalent bore elsewhere, even before adding pumps, tanks, and solar‑power systems.
How to manage costs in Turkana
Even though the baseline is higher, several steps can control the cost:
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Order a geophysical survey (e.g., resistivity) before drilling to avoid going much deeper than necessary.
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Request a detailed breakdown from at least two Turkana‑experienced contractors, including mobilisation, drilling, casing, and standby‑day charges.
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Plan for a complete system (pump, power, tank) in one budget so that “drilling only” quotes don’t later balloon when other components are added.
In short, borehole drilling in Turkana becomes more expensive mainly because of long‑haul logistics, hard/difficult rock, deeper aquifers, and higher standby/remote‑site overheads, which together justify the KSh 8,000–9,500 per‑metre band seen in market‑price tables.
