Tag: pest control

  • Heat and pests are creating a deadly cocktail for our foods

    Heat and pests are creating a deadly cocktail for our foods

    At the end of 2023, the government announced Kenya had just lived its hottest year on record, up 0.37 degrees on the year before, only to be topped by 2024, which was hotter still.

    The Kenya Meteorological Department has not released the country’s average temperature for 2024, but it now seems likely the country is gaining a degree every 3 to 5 years, which is generating an explosion in crop pests and disease carrying insects. Under these conditions, insects, viruses and bacterial diseases all grow faster at higher heats: they spread further, breed faster, survive better, and grow larger.

    At base, scientists calculate that each 1 degree rise in temperature causes an extra 10 to 20 percent of crop destruction by pests. But that assumes a mix of ordinary pests and ongoing pest control.

    Certainly, up until and including 2023, Kenyan farmers were just-about coping: maize production was ahead that year despite the heat, with official reports saying this was due to the improved rain. A nationwide survey of farmers found two-thirds faced varying degrees of Fall Armyworm (FAW) infestation, but they were reporting it was under control.

    Only then, the government banned a set of its approved pesticides, including the two most robust and affordable pesticides for FAW control, and that is where climate change and government policy collided.

    Maize production fell by 6 percent in 2024, on average and better than average rainfall. The government has been at pains to ascribe this to erratic rainfall, which did affect some areas, as they also had in previous years. But it has not been quite so diligent in reporting last year’s resurgence in FAW.

    Yet a study in Egypt, published in 2020, found at an average temperature of 20 degrees, the life cycle of FAW, from egg to laying the eggs of the next generation, was 72 days. At 25 degrees that fell to 40 days.

    This makes an unbelievably large difference. Each FAW moth lays 1000 – 2000 eggs. At 40 days, and nine generations in a year, the member of FAW in a year from one female rises to 38.4 septillion, which almost has no meaning except that it is followed by 27 zeros, versus the 15 zeros from one female at 20 degrees.

    Similar accelerations happen for other pests, like chafer grubs, cutworms and aphids.

    That puts huge pressure on pest control. OnYet there are few alternatives to pesticides that are able to control some of these.

    For FAW, biological controls include parasitic wasps that consume the worm. But only 140,000 of these have ever been released and so far protect less than 2 per cent of Kenya’s maize farmers.

    There are also organic pesticides, but none that have been found to clear more than 55 percent of the worm, leaving the other 45 percent to destroy the crop and generate quadrillions of new FAW each year.

    Yet, because the government has framed pest control as an ideological battle, the science and facts have themselves become contentious..

    This has seen those who report that pests are harming production cast as ‘cartels’, ‘infecting’ the regulator and Ministry of Agriculture officials’, according to government.

    But this seeming shift to an ideological battle has seen the government step away from managing the intended transition in a structured manner, and this poses a danger to our food system.

    The government decided not to conduct an assessment of which pests the banned chemicals were controlling, or any assessment of which alternatives were available to (all) farmers and how effective they are. Yet the World Health Organisation and the United Nations’ Food and Agricultural Organisation guide that these assessments are vital ahead of any pesticide ban.

    As it is, the majority of Kenyan farmers want to use less pesticides, which saves them costs, and are keen on alternatives. But without information, or any regard for gaps where there are no alternatives, this approach is just cutting food production needlessly and painfully.

    We need to now review what pests were being controlled and the alternatives and manage this transition so it does not keep building maize and food blights and shortages.

    Anthony Kioko is the Chief Executive Officer of Cereal Growers Association.

    Disclaimer! Opinions expressed in this article are not necessarily those of the Corporation.

  • Govt withdraws 77 pesticide products from use in Kenya

    Govt withdraws 77 pesticide products from use in Kenya

    The government has announced the immediate withdrawal of  77 pesticide products from the Kenyan market after being found to contain harmful active ingredients.

    Agriculture and Livestock Development Cabinet Secretary Mutahi Kagwe says the move follows completion of a comprehensive review of pesticide active ingredients which are registered in the country by the Pest Control Products Board (PCPB).

    “Following scientific assessment and stakeholder consultations we have identified certain active ingredients and associated end-use products that pose unacceptable risks to human health, crops, livestock and the environment” said Kagwe.

    The government has further restricted the use of 202 products on various crops while 151 other products are currently being reviewed  by the PCPB with the process expected to conclude by December this year. The review was conducted on 430 end use products currently being used by farmers across the country.

    “In the meantime, the use or importation of the 151 products remain prohibited until the end of the review,” he stated.

    Kagwe has also directed importers of pest control products to ensure the products are registered in their country of origin and has prohibited registration of products banned in the international market under multilateral environmental agreements.

    “Importation of of any molecular under review that is not approved in the European Union, the United States of America, Australia and Canada shall be prohibited until finalization and review,” added Kagwe.

  • Pest control board eyes new bill to enhance food safety

    Pest control board eyes new bill to enhance food safety

    Kenya could prohibit the imports of food products from other countries which have been cultivated using pesticides withdrawn for use in Kenya.

    According to the Pesticide Control Products Board Chief Executive Officer Frederick Muchiri, these are some of the proposed amendments in the Pest Control Products Act which will enhance the country’s food safety by restrict the entry of food crops containing harmful pesticides.

    “There are products we have withdrawn from use in the country but they are being used within our neigbouring countries and we also import quite some food from them,” said Muchiri.

    He added, “We might not be using them to produce but we might be consuming them in food we import from our neigboourhood.

    So that bill has taken care of that in that no produce will be allowed to come into the country if it contains products that have not been allowed for use in the country and that will go along way in safeguarding the health of our citizens.”

    Continuous use of withdrawn carcinogenic pesticide products and wrong application of pesticides have been cited a leading cause to food products from Kenya being flagged on the international market for containing high residue levels.

    Through the bill, PCPB is also targeting to have control on the sale of the products by ensuring only licensed sellers engage in the business.

    “The new bill addresses functional operational gaps. Once enacted it will seal some of the issues including people to dispense pesticides. It has been captured that the minimum qualification for people to run agrovets and factories has been spelled and that will be implemented to the letter,” added Muchiri.

    Agriculture stakeholders are further calling for increased involvement of private sector in offering extension services to farmers across all counties.

    The sector being a devolved function, counties are currently struggling with budget constraints to undertaken extension services as well as lack of properly trained staff to educate farmers on proper application of pesticides, a fact which further compromises food safety.

    “We see an opportunity where we can have private sector like ourselves training these farmers, working with government to put in place a mechanisms that will support sustainability of extension where all the private sector involvement at the smallholder farmers levels are coordinated in the way they deliver the stewardship messages,” said Erick Kimungui, Agro-chemicals Association of Kenya (AAK) Chief Executive Officer.

    This comes amid calls to the government to withdraw products containing glyphosate. However according to PCPB, the ingredient has no effect if used as per the label instruction.