How IWMI Will Reshape Irrigation Governance in Kenya
THE GOVERNMENT has reached a moment in Kenya’s irrigation journey where infrastructure alone is no longer the main constraint. Dams, canals, pumps and conveyance systems remain important, but the real question now is how water is governed, allocated, priced, monitored and sustained over time. This is where irrigation success will either be secured or quietly undermined. In this context, the growing role of the International Water Management Institute (IWMI) is not peripheral. It is central to whether Kenya’s irrigation expansion delivers lasting value. Kenya’s irrigation ambition is clear. Through the National Irrigation Sector Investment Plan and the Presidential Irrigation Expansion agenda , the country is deliberately shifting away from overdependence on rain-fed agriculture. What is less visible, but equally critical, is the governance machinery that must support this expansion. Without strong institutions, reliable data, fair water allocation rules and cost recovery mech...