Kaa Eco Investments LTD
CONSERVATION & ECO-FRIENDLY
At Kaa Eco Investments Ltd; we commercialize the harvesting of invasive biomass and transform aggressive ecological threats into premium, climate-positive materials, turning environmental liabilities into commercial assets for us and others.

About Us
Save Lake Jipe, Improve lives!
Founded in March 2026, Kaa Eco Investments Ltd engineers sustainable, circular alternatives for the energy and construction sectors by harvesting wild Typha biomass.
At Kaa Eco Investments Ltd; we commercialize the harvesting of invasive biomass and transform aggressive ecological threats into premium, climate-positive materials, turning environmental liabilities into commercial assets for us and others.
PROFESSIONALISM | HUMANITY | CREATIVITY | QUALITY | CONSERVATION






OUR SOCIAL IMPACT
We offer alternative source of income to the community through:
Restore our Lake, Engineering the Circular economy model. Â Learn More
Be Part of the Change
We invite forward-thinking stakeholders to collaborate with us in this commercial ecosystem restoration.
What We Do
Join the Industrial Restoration
We invite forward-thinking stakeholders to collaborate with us in this commercial ecosystem restoration. How to connect with us, Below;
1. As An Investor
Support our green factory expansions, machinery acquisition, and scalable manufacturing lines to capture the East African green materials market.
2. As A Developer
Source certified carbon-neutral insulation, thatch, and building blocks for your next sustainable real estate project.
As An Advisor
Provide technical, environmental, or circular supply chain expertise to help us continuously optimize our operations.
Save Our Endemic Fish - ASILIA
A study done in 2012 concluded that Jipe Tilapia will become extinct within 20yrs.
It now 14 years past and true to the words we hardly catch asilia fish in our daily harvests! Its gone!!
The invasion of Typha domingensis has pushed the endemic Jipe Tilapia (Oreochromis jipe) to the brink of extinction. The weed rapid expansion has triggered a chain of ecological nuisance for the lake's native fish.