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From: IRIN <[email protected]>
To: "Jean-Francois Darcq" <[email protected]>
Date: Thursday, October 6, 2011 2:38:34 PM GMT-0000
Subject: KENYA: Why size matters in agricultural production

KENYA: Why size matters in agricultural production

MOMBASA-TANA RIVER, 6 October 2011 (IRIN) - Coastal areas in Kenya provide a 
vivid illustration of the factors that thwart agricultural potential across 
much of Africa: small plot sizes, minimal irrigation and endemic poverty, which 
precludes investment, and in turn, greater productivity.
 
 "The locals open up very small pieces of land for farming," Elias Gitonga 
Kithaura, the Tana Delta District Commissioner, told IRIN.
 
 What was needed, he said, was role models to buck this trend by farming plots 
of about 50 hectares.
 
 "But are there people who are ready to exploit the resources here to grow 
rich?"
 
 The local weather is suitable for large-scale production of high-value crops, 
such as fruit and vegetables.
 
 Training in investment possibilities is another missing key ingredient, 
Stephen Muanga, the Bamba District Officer, told IRIN. Bamba is about 55km from 
the coastal town of Kilifi.
 
 "The residents find it cheaper to lease out the land for pasture than to work 
on it, for example," said Muanga. 
 
 Poverty contributes to this, with the high cost of farming implements a 
deterrent. It costs about KSh2,000 [US$20] to plough 0.4ha of land.
 
 Illiteracy is also a problem, he said, adding that in some areas almost 65 
percent of residents could not read or write. 
 
 "You can get a 20-year-old who has never gone to school and has never been to 
Kilifi Town," he said. "There is a lack of exposure."
 
 But even where locals engage in farming, it is mainly for subsistence. A lack 
of water pumps among riverine farmers for example, adversely affects the land 
under food production.
 
 "In our village [Duwayo, Tana River], only one person has a water pump, which 
he hires out for KSh300 [$3] per day," said Isaac Dima, a resident.
 
 "Then there is petrol to buy at KSh160 a litre [$1.60]. You have to buy all 
these things yourself."
 
 Dima said local farmers were organizing into groups to secure loan facilities.
 
 "Other than relying on food aid, it would be better if we bought the water 
pumps to sustain ourselves through irrigation agriculture and the sale of extra 
produce."
 
 At least 45 percent of the larger Tana River population needs food aid, 
according to the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA). 
 
 This is despite the region having Kenya's longest permanent river, the Tana, 
running through it.
 
 "We have a plan to develop irrigation schemes from the dams [upstream] after 
their completion," said Mandara Badirido, a professor at Jomo Kenyatta 
University of Agriculture and Technology. 
 
 Plans are under way to construct dams in Kilifi and Tana River. 
 
 "Bura and Hola irrigation schemes [in Tana River], for example, have proved 
that the region has the potential of producing a substantial amount of food 
crops that can even feed the entire nation, especially if the River Tana is 
utilized well," he said.
 
 But in the past, government irrigation schemes failed due to mismanagement and 
are now being revamped.
 
 Change crops
 
 In a region where high poverty levels mean farmers are unable to buy 
fertilizers to obtain good crop yields, experts are recommending the adoption 
of low input crops such as cassava to enhance food production and thereby food 
security.
 
 "The locals tend to believe that Ugali [maize flour cake] should be the staple 
food, yet we can cultivate short-term crops such as cassava and millet that are 
[more] nutritious," Josephat Mwatela, the principal of Mombasa Polytechnic 
University College, told IRIN.
 
 This over-reliance on maize affects local food security as the region is a net 
importer of the cereal.
 
 To help address this, the Kenya Agricultural Research Institute (KARI) 
recommends cassava production as well as the milling of cassava flour to avoid 
over-dependence on maize flour.
 
 "Cassava can be used to substitute up to 50 percent maize flour in ugali 
without compromising on colour, taste, aroma and texture," it says [ 
http://www.kari.org/biennialconference/conference12/docs/ACCEPTABILITY%20OF%20CASSAVA%20FLOUR%20IN%20UGALI%20AND%20PORRIDGE%20IN%20AN%20EFFORT%20TO%20INCREASE%20FOOD%20SECURITY%20IN%20COASTAL%20KENYA.pdf
 ].

 Poor farming techniques also contribute to the loss of fertile top soils, with 
further impacts on food security.
 
 For example, suspended sediments from the land brought to the sea through 
river discharge result in increased water turbidity, affecting fish stocks. 
Fish are an important food source in parts of the region.
 
 aw-jk/am/mw
 
[END]

This report online: http://www.irinnews.org/report.aspx?reportID=93904



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