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