Posts

Irrigation PS Kimotho Assesses Chume Borehole Benefiting Over 1000 Residents

Image
Economic development is often narrated through the language of markets, trade balances, and fiscal frameworks, yet the most consequential transformations frequently begin far beneath those abstractions, where hydrology rather than ideology determines whether human potential is constrained or released, and the official inspection by Principal Secretary CPA Ephantus Kimotho at the Chume Community Borehole Project in Kinangop Constituency brings this reality into sharp institutional focus by illustrating how a single water intervention can rewire the economic possibilities of over 1,000 residents. At first glance, a 270-meter borehole in Nyandarua County may appear as a narrow technical asset, yet within the strategic architecture of the State Department for Irrigation, it functions as a macroeconomic instrument disguised as engineering infrastructure, converting groundwater into stability, predictability, and ultimately into the quiet expansion of household capabilities that rarely app...

How Dr. Jane Imbunya is Rewriting the Human Equation of Kenya’s Civil Service

Image
The story of Dr. Jane Kere Imbunya does not begin in the echoing corridors of power, nor amid the ceremonial grandeur that so often accompanies public office. It begins elsewhere, in a quieter world where questions mattered more than proclamations and where the patient cultivation of knowledge was regarded not as an achievement in itself, but as a responsibility. In Vihiga County, at Kaimosi Friends University, she occupied a place that suited both her temperament and her intellect. As Dean of the School of Education and Social Sciences, she moved through lecture halls, faculty meetings, research seminars, and curriculum reviews with the calm precision of a scholar who understood that institutions are ultimately shaped not by buildings or budgets, but by people. Those who worked alongside her often encountered a woman less interested in grand declarations than in understanding why systems behaved the way they did and why human beings responded to them as they did. Her academic journey ...

HOW STEPHEN WAMBUA REBUILT THE ENGINE OF THE KENYAN CIVIL SERVICE

By Victor Patience Oyuko. There are offices within government that attract attention with almost theatrical ease. Ministers announce policies. Politicians exchange accusations. Parliamentary committees summon witnesses beneath the bright glare of public scrutiny. Yet behind these visible chambers of power exists another realm altogether, one inhabited by men and women whose names seldom appear in headlines despite their influence extending into every ministry, county office, and public institution across a nation. It is within this quieter architecture that Stephen Kakulu Wambua has spent his professional life. To understand his work requires abandoning the popular imagination of government as a collection of personalities and instead seeing it as a vast machine composed of human capability. Every permit issued correctly, every development programme executed efficiently, every policy translated from paper into practical reality depends ultimately upon the competence of public office...

How Kenya Can Anchor Massive Irrigation Projects on Global Carbon Markets

Image
  Kenya's climate problem is often described as an environmental challenge, yet that framing understates what is actually at stake. The more accurate description is that Kenya suffers from a macroeconomic vulnerability whose symptoms happen to appear first in fields, rivers, and grazing lands. Agriculture remains one of the country's most important economic sectors, directly and indirectly supporting millions of livelihoods, supplying raw materials to industry, generating export earnings, and stabilizing rural consumption. Yet a substantial share of this production remains dependent on rainfall, which means that a significant portion of national economic performance is effectively indexed to weather volatility. When rains fail, the consequences spread far beyond the farm gate. Food prices rise, household purchasing power declines, export volumes weaken, fiscal pressures intensify, and economic growth slows. In economic terms, Kenya is attempting to build long term development o...

How the National Irrigation Authority Can Unlock Private Capital for Commercial Agriculture

Image
One of the most persistent zombie ideas in development economics is the belief that large-scale agricultural infrastructure must be financed almost entirely by governments. The notion survives despite repeated evidence that public budgets alone are rarely sufficient to build the scale of infrastructure modern agriculture requires. It lingers in policy discussions long after fiscal realities have rendered it obsolete. Kenya now faces precisely this challenge. The country has ambitious plans under the Bottom-Up Economic Transformation Agenda (BeTA) to expand agricultural productivity, strengthen food security, and increase rural incomes. Irrigation sits at the center of those ambitions because rain-fed agriculture can no longer carry the burden of feeding a growing population while simultaneously supporting exports, manufacturing, and rural employment. Yet there is a simple arithmetic problem. The National Irrigation Authority (NIA) has strategic objectives that require substantial expan...

Why Magical Bura Is NIA & State Department of Irrigation’s Defining Achievement

Image
  In the heart of Tana River County, something powerful is taking root. The Bura Irrigation Scheme, or Magical Bura, for the purposes of this article, is no longer just a place on the map. It has become the living proof of what happens when bold leadership meets practical action in Kenya's quest for food security. Under President William Ruto’s Bottom-Up Economic Transformation Agenda, also known as BETA, this irrigation scheme stands as a beacon of real change. It shows how infrastructure, land rights, and community focus can turn potential into prosperity for ordinary farming families. This is not another headline about distant government plans. It is a story of hands-on work happening right now. The visit by Principal Secretary CPA Ephantus Kimotho marked a significant milestone. He launched the construction of the Hirimani Bridges at Villages 2 and 6. At the same event, he issued Green Cards covering over 2000 acres of land to 720 farming families. These moves are not symbolic....

Why Kenya's TIPA Alliance with Israel Could Become the Irrigation Breakthrough

Image
Kenya is, by many measures, a water-rich country in waiting. The Tana River basin alone drains a catchment of over 95,000 square kilometres. The Ewaso Ng'iro, the Athi, the Nzoia; rivers carrying immense hydrological wealth across landscapes that have nourished communities for generations. And yet, paradoxically, Kenya remains one of sub-Saharan Africa's more chronically food-insecure nations, where millions of smallholder farming households ; the backbone of the rural economy; remain persistently exposed to climate shocks, depressed yields, and the grim arithmetic of rain-dependent agriculture in a warming world. The disconnect between water potential and food security outcomes is not an accident of geography; it is a consequence of underinvestment, technological lag, and the entrenched dominance of rainfed agriculture in a climate that grows less predictable with each passing season. It is against this structural backdrop that a meeting at the State Department for Irrigation ...