Title: presentation by: sabina wakio maghanga, director, macro
1LEVERAGING SOUTH SOUTH AND TRIANGULAR
COOPERATION TO PROMOTE FOOD SECURITY IN KENYA
- Presentation by
- SABINA WAKIO MAGHANGA,
- DIRECTOR, MACRO PLANNING DIRECTORATE
- MPNDV20300
- AND
- DR. LUTTA MOHAMMED, PRINCIPAL REEARCH OFFICER
COORDINATION OF M E, KARI - 23RD NOVEMBER 2010
2OUTLINE
- Country profile
- Definitions
- Food security in kenya
- Specific interventions and lessons learnt
- Transferring food security solution and lessons
learned - Donor country facilitation and lessons learned
3Country Profile
- Official Name The Republic of Kenya
- Location Lying in East Africa, borders Tanzania
to the south, Uganda to the west, Ethiopia and
Sudan to the North and Somalia and the Indian
Ocean to the east. - Total area 582,646 km²
- land 569,140 sq km
- water 11,227 sq km
- Arable land 8.01
- population 38, 610,097
- Capital Nairobi
4Country Profile cont.
- Languages English and Kiswahili
- Currency Kenya Shilling
- Administrative Units 47 Counties
- Attained its independence in 1st June 1963 and
declared Republic 12th December 1964 - Promulgated new constitution 28th August, 2010
5Definitions
- The World Food Summit of 1996 defined food
security as existing when all people at all
times have access to sufficient, safe, nutritious
food to maintain a healthy and active life. - The summit identified that Food security is
built on three pillars - Food availability sufficient quantities of food
available on a consistent basis. - Food access having sufficient resources to
obtain appropriate foods for a nutritious diet. - Food use appropriate use based on knowledge of
basic nutrition and care, as well as adequate
water and sanitation.
6Food security in Kenya
- Agriculture is the main stay of the Kenya economy
- It represents about 24 of GDP
- About one-third of agricultural produce is
exported, accounting for 65 of Kenya's exports - Accounts for about 18 of formal employment
- Over 5 million are engaged in agriculture mainly
small holder.
7Food security in Kenya cont.
- Agriculture is made up of 4 major sub-sectors
industrial crops, food crops, horticulture, and
livestock and fisheries. - About 146 commodities are grown including cereals
and pulse crops, horticulture and floriculture,
roots and tuber crops, industrial crops, dairy
production and ranching.
8Food security in Kenya cont.
- Kenya has five main agro-ecological regions
- a narrow, humid to sub-humid coastal strip
- bush-covered plains in the interior
- high-lying scrublands in the northwest
- fertile grasslands and highland forests in the
south-west and - the Great Rift Valley in the west, where some of
the countrys highest mountains, including Mount
Kenya (5,199m above sea level) are situated.
Except for the temperate highlands, the climate
is hot and dry.
9Food security in Kenya cont.
- Challenges faced by the Sector
- Productivity levels are below potential for
most crops. - Land use Most land remains under-exploited esp.
ASAL which forms 84 of land - Markets productivity in the market is
constrained by inefficiencies in the supply chain
eg limited storage capacity, lack of post harvest
services, and access to input markets.
10Food security in Kenya cont.
- Value addition Very low hence low
competitiveness. - An estimated 10 million people in suffer from
chronic food insecurity, while about four million
people require emergency food assistance from
time to time.
11 Specific Interventions
- Specific interventions include
- Development of a national agricultural policy
and strategies (Vision 2030 long-term development
policy document). - Support to Farmers through
- Extension services
- Training farmers training centers, field days,
demonstration farms
12 Specific Interventions cont.
- Research and development in thematic areas
including - crops (over 100 crop species or commodities)
- livestock (at least 10 domestic animal species)
- Natural Resource Management (NRM)
- Agricultural Product (and service) and
- Value Chains (APVCs).
13Specific Interventions cont.
- Capacity Building eg The Kenya Agriculture
Research Institute (KARI) has a pool of 542
researchers at PhD, Masters and bachelors degree
levels to support the above programmes besides a
large number of extension staff at the grass
root. - Collaboration among regional agricultural
research institutions eg the Association for
Strengthening Agricultural research in Eastern
and Central Africa (ASARECA)
14Specific Interventions cont.
- Putting in place key programmes to address
agricultural strategies by KARI and other
institutions - Biotechnology and Genetic Resource Management,
- Socio-Economics and Applied Statistics and
Adaptive Research, - Outreach and Partnerships
15Specific Interventions cont.
- Promotion of production and consumption of
indigenous food crops - Increased awareness of food utilization and
nutrition resulting in lowering malnutrition and
disease burden. - Promotion of grain amaranth which is good for
HIV/AIDS patients - Development of aquaculture marine and inland
fisheries - Seed multiplication
- Regional integration common market for EAC
16Other Specific Interventions Cont
- Fertilizer cost reduction initiatives bulk
procurement of fertilizer - Marketing and distribution
- Value addition
- Setting up disease free zone in ASAL
- Economic stimulus package eg restocking,
irrigation etc - Cooperative movement
- Infrastructure development
17Lessons Learned
- Need for a clear national agriculture/food policy
and strategies - Collaborative efforts local/regional/national,
cross boarder/international are important - Research and development is key
- Need for an integrated approach to food security
- Sound environmental management
- Technology has to be packaged in a language that
can be understood
18Lessons Learned cont.
- Appropriate crops produced need to be protected
from pests and diseases and to be well fed - Adoption rates are high when extension services
are carried out by partners other the technology
developer - Marketing cooperation crop varieties across
different borders eg katumani maize variety has
been sold to countries like Ethiopia has been
recognized in Africa for about 20 years.
19Transferring food security solutions
- Signing of MOUs between Kenyas agriculture,
science and technology specialized agencies with
other African countries. - Hosting of Centres of Excellence in agriculture,
science and technology such as KARI, JKUAT, KIPI,
KEPHIS - University and middle level training to Africans
and other countries - Cross boarder initiatives e.g. LVEMP
20Transferring food security solutions
- Collaborative research projects or activities
such as - Access to special sites (e.g. mid-altitude
testing site at Kiboko), infrastructure (ISO
Certified bio-technology labs) - Student exchange (to and from KARI)
- Consultancies/contracts with research and
educational institutions and industry - sub-regional, regional and international levels
21Transferring food security solutions cont.
- Collaborator
Collaborative projects - International Agr Res Centres (IARCs)
48.8 - Developed Country Research
10.6 - Regional Research Networks (ASARECA)
8.9 - International private sector
4.9 - Developed Country Universities
4.9 - International Research Networks
3.2 - UN Agencies
2.4 - Others
16.2 -
22Transferring food security solutions Contd
- Reciprocal exchange of research materials,
information, equipments, working space,
knowledge/expertise and personnel between or
amongst KARI programs and among other STI
institutions nationally and internationally. - Technology release of varieties produced by
research institutions - Regional integration e.g. EAC and COMESA.
23Transferring food security solutions cont
- The following modes of interaction between KARI
and other countries have been used - Type of exchange
Percent - Conference
64.3 - Short course
20.6 - Visiting Scientist
11.1 - Other
1.5 - Exchange experience
1.3 - Consultancy
1.3 - Total
100.0
24lessons learnt
- Regional integration is a recipe to transfer of
home grown solution - Low levels development and poverty may hamper
transfer of solutions - Funding
- Attitude towards new thinking
25DONOR COUNTRY FACILITATION
- Human resource development e.g. JICA at JKUAT,
- Establishment of regional agricultural research
networks e.g. ASARECA facilitates KARIs
application of its capacity to use its resource
base - Funding of infrastructure development e.g. AfDB,
Japan, EU, China, World Bank among others - Seed bulking/multiplication by Japan
- Irrigation
26Lessons learnt
- Sustainability of programmes
- Sufficiency and effectiveness of resources
27Thank You