GCTDF 2026 Day Four: The Diplomacy of Nature Takes Centre
Stage as Forum Explores Strategic Climate Policy and Next-
Generation Conservation Technology
On the sidelines of the fourth day of the Global
Conservation Tech & Drone Forum (GCTDF 2026) (4 March 2026), a landmark
development in Africa’s conservation technology landscape was unveiled: Kenya is
pioneering the development of ‘Smart Biospheres’ through the launch of a nationally
available, sovereign LoRaWAN Network Server (LNS) for wildlife conservation.
The announcement, made by the Kenya Wildlife Service (KWS) with support from the
Connected Conservation Foundation (CCF), Actility by Netmore, and Konza Technopolis
Development Authority, marks a significant step toward building cooperative, sovereign
digital infrastructure for biodiversity protection. The new system ensures all wildlife
tracking data remains within Kenya’s borders and under KWS control, complying with
the Kenya Data Protection Act 2019, while enabling secure, real-time data sharing
across conservancies for the first time.
The timing and significance of the announcement were highlighted during the forum’s
sessions on Day 4, which focused on the theme “The Diplomacy of Nature:
Conservation as Statecraft.” Jonty Slater of GCTDF set the stage earlier in the day,
framing the critical need for such infrastructure.
“The future of effective conservation depends on our ability to share knowledge
responsibly and build systems that are both interoperable and secure,” said Jonty
Slater. “We are moving from isolated projects to integrated intelligence. The work being
done to create sovereign data infrastructure, like the LoRaWAN network announced
today, is exactly the kind of collaborative, forward-thinking statecraft we need to
protect entire ecosystems, not just individual species.”
The new sovereign server, hosted at Konza Technopolis, transitions Kenya from
fragmented, on-premise conservation networks to a resilient, national-scale ‘smart
biosphere. ‘It allows data from wildlife tags, ranger trackers, and environmental
sensors, currently covering millions of hectares through 62 gateways and 23 partners,
to roam securely across landscapes like a mobile phone network, ensuring continuous
monitoring as animals move between the Maasai Mara, Lewa, and beyond.
This pioneering announcement anchored a day of robust dialogue at GCTDF 2026 on
the architecture of conservation intelligence. A flagship panel, “Architecting Intelligence:
From Sensors to Regional Systems,” moderated by Munyala Mwalo of Action Labs
Africa, delved into the practicalities of building the data ecosystems that make initiatives
like the sovereign LNS possible.
“We are moving from asking ‘what technology can do’ to ‘what infrastructure must we
build together,” said Munyala Mwalo. “The conversation is no longer just about a
single drone or a sensor. It’s about architecting the regional systems, the data
standards, the sovereign servers, the cooperative governance that allow intelligence to
flow securely from a ranger’s handheld device to a policymaker’s dashboard. Kenya’s
LoRaWAN server is a masterclass in building that architecture from the ground up.”
The forum also heard from voices representing community-led action and innovation. A
special message from the Green Belt Movement reinforced the enduring power of
grassroots environmentalism in the digital age, while the Innovate Africa Challenge
2025 Pitch Session, hosted by GIZ, showcased the vibrant pipeline of entrepreneurial
talent applying technology to pressing conservation challenges.
The convergence of these themes; sovereign data infrastructure, regional cooperation,
community legacy, and youth innovation underscored Day 4’s central message: that
technology, when governed ethically and collaboratively, becomes a powerful tool of
diplomacy and long-term resilience. Kenya’s ‘Smart Biosphere’ initiative stands as a
tangible example of this principle in action, placing the nation at the forefront of a
global movement to harness digital infrastructure in the service of nature.
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