What Do We Get Wrong About Irrigation in Kenya? What is the Missing Link?
Ask most people what irrigation means, and the answer is almost automatic. Dams, canals, pipes, pumps. Steel and concrete. Large numbers of acres brought under cultivation. It is an image that feels complete, but it is also misleading. Irrigation is often treated as an engineering problem, something that can be solved by building more. More storage, more distribution, more expansion. The assumption is simple. Once the infrastructure exists, the outcomes will follow. Food production will rise, incomes will improve, and communities will stabilise. That assumption has shaped thinking for years. What it misses is the fact that irrigation does not fail because of a lack of structures. It fails when those structures are disconnected from the people they are meant to serve. Where the Real Problem Has Always Been The quiet truth about irrigation in Kenya is that many projects have historically struggled not at the point of construction, but at the point of use. Water reaches a scheme, but dist...