Tag: Kenya Agricultural and Livestock Research Organisation (KALRO)

  • Govt pushes sunflower farming to cut oil imports, boost incomes

    Govt pushes sunflower farming to cut oil imports, boost incomes

    The Government has launched a comprehensive initiative to enhance local production and processing of edible oils, with a particular focus on sunflower farming marking a major step in reducing Kenya’s heavy dependence on imports and spurring rural economic growth.

    Speaking when she visited a cottage factory in Nambale, Busia County that is processing sunflower seeds into edible oils, Principal Secretary, State Department of MSMEs, Susan Mang’eni urged local stakeholders, farmers, cooperatives, agripreneurs, and SMEs to actively embrace the cultivation and processing of edible oil crops adding that it is a high-return sector.

    “As Kenya continues to face a shortage of raw materials for edible oil processing resulting in billions spent annually on imports it is imperative that we turn to regions like Busia, which hold the right climate, fertile land, and vibrant farming communities, to lead this transformation.” She noted.

    Adding that, “This is a high-return sector that not only promises enhanced household incomes but also positions Busia as a key contributor to national self-sufficiency in edible oil.”

    With an estimated annual edible oil consumption of around 900,000 metric tonnes and domestic production contributing a mere 80,000 metric tonnes, Kenya spends between KSh 100 billion and KSh 160 billion annually on imports, making edible oils its second-largest import, after petroleum.

    The efforts by government to revitalise the sector falls under the Bottom-Up Economic Transformation Agenda (BETA), which is designed to support micro, small, and medium-sized enterprises (MSMEs), encourage value addition, and promote food security and rural development.

    One promising example is the sunflower oil processing cottage factory established by Daljeet Wirk Food Processors in Nambale, Busia County.

    During a recent visit to the site, the Principal Secretary praised the facility’s dual-impact model, which produces cooking oil for human consumption and repurposes waste as chicken feed, generating an additional income stream.

    sunflower
    Principal Secretary, State Department of MSMEs, Susan Mang’eni (R)

    “Daljeet Wirk Food Processors is a good example of how integrated approaches combine processing with small-scale farming can boost food security, create jobs, and build a resilient local economy.” She said.

    Accompanied by GIZ’s Dr. Christoph Zipfel and county leaders, PS Mangeni highlighted the initiative as a practical example of BETA in action.

    The Government is actively facilitating access to certified sunflower seeds through organised farmer groups in every ward. To ensure maximum productivity, each ward must mobilise at least 800–1,000 farmers.

    Furthermore, successful wards will benefit from the installation of sunflower pressing machines, which streamlines the conversion of seeds into oil and enhances local value chains.

    Other Government agencies are also playing a critical role. During the Open Week exhibition in Kabete, Kiambu County, Kenya, the Kenya Agricultural and Livestock Research Organisation (KALRO) chairman, Dr. Thuo Mathenge, announced a plan to engage at least 200 young people in each of Kenya’s 47 counties in sunflower cultivation.

    This strategy not only boosts oilseed production but also addresses youth unemployment, offering a meaningful and sustainable livelihood.

    He noted that sunflower farming holds immense potential not only to cut Kenya’s oil import bill but also to empower rural communities, especially women and youth adding that with the proper support infrastructure, access to inputs, and guaranteed markets through public-private partnerships, sunflowers could become a reliable source of income across Kenyan counties.

     

  • Gov’t urged to speed up animal feeds raw materials importation

    Gov’t urged to speed up animal feeds raw materials importation

    A section of Migori farmers have urged the national government to move with speed to import duty-free yellow maize to ease the economic pressure on the high costs of animal feeds.

    The Chairperson of the Migori Kenya National Federation of Farmers (KENAFF) Peter Chacha said that the importation of duty-free yellow maize and other animal feeds raw materials will ease the pain of the high cost of animal feeds that have skyrocketed for the last three years.

    President William Ruto while addressing the UDA delegates at Bomas in September this year, announced that the government was planning to start importing duty-free yellow maize to ease the high cost of animal feeds in the country.

    Chacha applauded the government for lifting taxes on animal feeds as well as extending duty waivers for manufacturers to import raw materials to ease the cost of animal meals in an effort to boost the country’s livestock sector.

    According to the Kenya Agricultural and Livestock Research Organisation (KALRO), the livestock industry contributes about 10 percent of the national Gross Domestic Product (GDP) and at least 50 percent of the agricultural GDP making the industry an integral part of the Kenyan economic drive.

    He said that the high cost of living and the prevailing drought had pushed the majority of farmers to forfeit some of the agricultural activities in the country.

    Chacha, however, said that lowering the fertiliser prices by the government has helped farmers to increase food production in Migori and the country at large.

    Noela Oyoo, a pig farmer from Suna East Sub County, Migori encouraged the government to import duty-free maize to ease her pain on the high costs of animal feed.

    “I used to buy a 90 kilogrammes bag of maize a few years ago at Ksh1, 800 but now the same sack is retaining at above Ksh 5,000,” Oyoo lamented.

    Oyoo who has more than 500 pigs at her Stella farm said that it was becoming hard to sustain her pig farming due to the high costs of feeds.

    She was, however, optimistic that if the government can be able to import the duty-free yellow maize, then the high cost of animal feeds can be addressed in order to improve the livestock sector and the small-scale businesses in the country.