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    In December 2016 in Nairobi, President Uhuru Kenyatta hosted the largest ever annual gathering of the African Green Revolution Forum (AGRF) in Nairobi, at which he delivered a blunt assessment of Africa’s economic future.

    “The transformation of Africa,” he said, “will only work if we transform agriculture.”

    He speaks from experience, because what’s true for Africa is, especially true for Kenya. Our future fortunes are in the hands of our farmers and the food industry. Three out of every four Kenyans work in some aspect of agriculture and food production and economic growth in agriculture is eleven times more effective at reducing poverty than growth in any other sector.  

    The importance of agriculture for Kenya and for all of Africa is now widely acknowledged and a new wave of support is rising in both the public and private sector, and among development partners and donors. 

    For example, at last year’s AGRF, the African Development Bank (AfDB) pledged about Sh2.5 trillion (US $24 billion) over the next ten years for agribusiness projects in the continent.  In Kenya, President Kenyatta pledged Sh20.8 billion (US $200 million) in new spending to help young farmers gain access to markets, financing and insurance. The Kenya Commercial Bank Group,  led by the Chair Joshua Oigara, set aside Sh36.4 billion (US $350 million) - 5 per cent of the bank’s overall lending portfolio - for financing agribusiness initiatives targeting Kenya’s 3.5 million smallholder farmers. 

    The prospect of a surge of investments for Kenyan farmers and local agribusinesses is raising expectations for the sector. That’s why the Government of Kenya, in partnership with the African Union Commission (AUC), the AUC’s New Partnership for Africa’s Development (NEPAD) Agency, the AGRAF, and Africa Lead  (a program run by the United States Agency for International Development, USAID), convened a three-day meeting in Nairobi in December 2016 to build consensus for a new strategy that will guide the implementation of Kenya’s National Agriculture Investment Plan (NAIP). 

    The discussions, which attracted more than 100 people representing a wide array of interests, are part of a series of meetings being facilitated by the AU to help African countries implement their commitments as signatories of the Comprehensive African Agriculture Development Programme or CAADP.  The impressive turnout for the Nairobi round of deliberations is a signal that, in Kenya at least—where agriculture is strongly represented in its Vision 2030—there is a strong constituency ready to translate expectations into action. 

    But why should anyone invest in Kenyan farms and local agriculture businesses? One answer is to be found in Kenya’s rapidly growing food retail sector. Driven by explosive demand among urban consumers, food purchases in the country are growing by an impressive 10 per cent per year and are expected to reach Sh1.8 trillion (US $17.6 billion) by 2020. In fact, demand is exceeding domestic supply and imports now account for about half of all domestic purchases of staples like rice, wheat and soybeans. 

    And with the right mix of investments, Kenyan farmers could own 100 per cent of that market. For example, greater public investments in crop research and private investments in local production of high-yielding and locally adapted seeds and farm inputs could help rapidly narrow the pervasive “yield gap” on Kenyan farms. Today, most farmers harvest about two tons of maize per hectare when their counterparts elsewhere in the world get six, and about a half ton of beans per hectare when they could be getting 10 times that amount. 

    Meanwhile investments in better storage options, particularly refrigerated facilities, and transportation infrastructure can help link farmers to the markets and justify expenditures and loans for high-yield crop varieties and quality inputs. 

    In addition, investments can take advantage of many positive developments in the Kenyan agriculture sector. For example, over the last 15 years, yields of bananas, mangoes, and potatoes have more than doubled, making them among the most valuable crops locally and opening up business opportunities in both domestic and export markets.  There is already a new public/private partnership dedicated to constructing cold storage facilities in Kenya and elsewhere in East Africa that will capitalize on the potential of rising potato production by connecting millions of smallholder farms to produce markets.

    Our agriculture sector also is attracting investor interest because Kenyans are increasingly recognized around the world as intensely entrepreneurial people, who naturally gravitate toward innovation. For example, Safaricom’s MPesa money transfer system is more efficient and more widely used than consumer electronic payment systems in the United States and Europe. Many people rightly believe we can bring that same kind of innovative thinking to agriculture. 

    But effectively channeling the new resources now becoming available for Kenyan agriculture requires achieving consensus on a detailed investment roadmap. It must inspire confidence in the public and private sector, and in donor countries and international institutions, that generous commitments to agriculture will generate the progress Kenyans need and deserve. 

    The agriculture investment forum went a long way toward finalizing a new National Agriculture Investment Plan for Kenya that can attract widespread support. Many of us involved in the meeting felt it embraced the “seize the moment” theme of last year’s AGRAF by infusing Kenya’s agriculture agenda with a sense of purpose and urgency. We are now asking for a broad group of partners in the public and private sector to join us in seizing the moment for Kenya. Together, we can build a coalition that can accumulate and allocate the right mix of investments that will ensure agriculture becomes a powerful engine for delivering economic opportunity and food security across Kenya.

    Hon. Willy Bett is the Cabinet Secretary in the Ministry of Agriculture, Livestock and Fisheries in Kenya.  

     

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    A farmer takes a close look at cassava harvest during the 2016 Kakamega County ASK Show. A Machakos factory is offering a ready market for cassava farmers. PHOTO BY LABAN ROBERT.

    Small-scale farmers who have been producing cassava for domestic consumption can sell their crop to the recently opening of Kiara Agro Limited factory in Machakos County.

    The factory crashes at least 15 tonnes of cassava to extract starch for re-packaging and selling to local consumers.

    Kiara Agro Ltd Managing Director Pina Patel says the factory is ready to help farmers in producing high quality cassava to meet its demand while providing a source of revenue to the families.

    Soil can be tested and best yielding breeds recommended, as one of the ways of helping the farmers.

    “The cassava tubers must be of god quality to fetch well. Quality tubers yield high starch content, which is good for the company and the farmer. They have less fibre content and more starch, which is our main target product,” he says.

    But the director insists that the cassava must meet the set criteria for the company to accept produce from suppliers.

    A mature tuber must be at least one or one and half feet long, and two to three inches in thickness. This would ensure maximum productivity.

    “In every five kilos of the tubers we need at least to kilos of starch. This is achievable if a farmer has the right variety and proper management practices,” he said.

    Just like sweet and Irish potatoes, farmers are selling cassava in form of crisps.

    Much of the processing cassava into crisps is done locally, with more others doing it on road sides and open spaces, posing multiple health risks.

    Patel said the starch minting from the cassava is an opportunity for cassava farmers to enjoy the tuber in its finest powder form, when the less useful materials like fibre have been eliminated.

    “Besides hygiene, processing increases the shelf-life of the cassava. No produce would go to waste after processing, for it will be consumed when the supply from farms is low. This would ensure a constant supply to avid consumers,” he said.

    READ ALSO:High starch-yielding Katuni cassava earns more for arid farmers

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    READ ALSOFarmers scale up cassava preservation to remove poisonous cyanide

    Cassava tolerates relatively poor soils and drought. This makes it a leading staple food for more than 300 million Africans of drier regions.

    Food and Agricultural Organisation says Africa produced 140 million metric tonnes of cassava against 65 million metric tonnes of maize in 2011.

    Much of this cassava is more of a food than cash crop. 

    But emergency of processing industry would turn the tubers to a commercial crop for most small-scale farmers in the drier and infertile soil regions where tea, coffee and other crops may not do well.

    They will earn between Sh4 and Sh6 per kilo, which he says is way above the production cost of about Sh1.30 per kilo of cassava.

    The director said their research had shown the local market is in demand of processed cassava, making this venture a lucrative investment.

    He said the company looks forward to expanding to process more cassava.

     

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