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What Do We Get Wrong About Irrigation in Kenya? What is the Missing Link?

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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...

How PS Kimotho Is Moving Irrigation Planning From Estimates to Evidence

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  Irrigation in Kenya has never lacked ambition. The intention to expand acreage, stabilise food production, and reduce reliance on rainfall has been clear for decades. What has been less certain is the precision behind those ambitions. Decisions about where to invest, which areas to prioritise, and how to design irrigation systems have often relied on partial information. Maps that are outdated. Data that is fragmented across institutions. Assumptions about water availability that are not always verified in real time. The result is not failure, but inefficiency. Resources are deployed, but not always optimally. Projects are implemented, but not always where they deliver the highest return. That gap between intention and precision has quietly shaped the pace of irrigation development. What is now emerging is a deliberate effort to close that gap. The Turn Toward Evidence At the centre of this shift is the integration of Earth Observation into irrigation planning. This is not a th...

PS Kimotho positions Turkana at the Centre of Kenya’s Irrigation Future

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There are places that a country grows used to misunderstanding. Turkana County has long been one of them. It is often described through the language of scarcity, defined by drought, distance, and difficulty. That description is not entirely wrong, but it is incomplete. It focuses on what is missing and overlooks what is possible. Beneath the harsh climate lies something more consequential. Vast tracts of land remain underutilised. Seasonal water systems flow and disappear without being fully harnessed. Underground reserves exist but are unevenly accessed. The problem has never been the absence of potential. It has been the absence of systems capable of converting that potential into sustained productivity. What is beginning to shift is not the land itself, but how it is being seen. A Different Way of Looking at Water Water in arid regions is often treated as a constraint. It determines what cannot be done. That thinking, while grounded in reality, can also become limiting. It leads to...

How Strategic Partnerships Are Reshaping Irrigation Development in Kenya

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  For a long time, irrigation in Kenya followed a familiar pattern. Government planned. Government funded. Government implemented. The intention was always clear, to expand agricultural productivity and reduce dependence on rainfall, but the results often moved at a slower pace than the urgency of the problem demanded. Large schemes would be designed, budgets allocated, and infrastructure rolled out over time. Some succeeded. Others stalled. Many struggled with maintenance, coordination, or scale. Meanwhile, farmers continued to rely heavily on unpredictable weather, and entire regions remained exposed to cycles of drought and food insecurity. What was missing was not effort. It was alignment. Irrigation is not a single-sector activity. It sits at the intersection of water management, agriculture, financing, community systems, and increasingly, climate resilience. Trying to drive it through one institution alone has always placed limits on what can be achieved. That is where a shif...

The Power of School-Based Irrigation Systems in Rural Development

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  There are places in Kenya where the absence of water quietly defines everything. It shapes how children learn, how communities survive, and how the future is imagined. In these spaces, development is not held back by lack of effort or ambition, but by a single constraint that touches every part of life. Water. In regions like Turkana County, that reality is neither abstract nor seasonal. It is constant. The land stretches wide, the sun is unforgiving, and the distance between potential and possibility is often measured in access to something as basic as a reliable water source. Schools exist, communities persist, but the environment places limits on what can be sustained over time. It is within this context that school-based irrigation begins to take on a meaning that goes far beyond agriculture. A school is rarely seen as infrastructure in the way roads, dams, or pipelines are. It is seen as a place of learning, a social institution, a point of gathering. Yet, in rural and arid ...

How PS Kimotho Is Driving Diplomacy Through the Daua Dam

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Across the Horn of Africa , rivers do not recognise borders. They rise where they can, flow where gravity allows, and sustain whoever lies along their path. Yet the moment those rivers cross into political space, they become something else entirely. They become questions of ownership, access, control, and sometimes tension. For a long time, countries have tried to manage water as though it belongs neatly within their territories. It never has. That mismatch between natural systems and political boundaries has quietly shaped how development unfolds in this region. It has also limited how far individual countries can go on their own. Kenya knows this reality well. So do Ethiopia and Somalia. Each faces growing pressure on water resources, increasing climate variability, and rising demand from populations that depend on agriculture for survival. These pressures do not stop at the border. They move across it. What is beginning to change is how these shared challenges are being approached. ...

Why Ngong Forest Is the Test Case for Kenya’s Forest Revolution

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  Kenya has spent decades trying to protect its forests, often through fragmented efforts that addressed one problem at a time. Tree planting campaigns would come and go. Enforcement would tighten in one season and weaken in another. Communities living around forests were frequently treated as beneficiaries rather than partners. The result has been a pattern that is familiar across the country: progress that is visible, but rarely sustained. A different approach is now taking shape, and it is unfolding within Ngong Forest. What is emerging here is not just another conservation initiative. It is a structured attempt to redesign how forest protection, restoration, and community livelihoods interact. That is why Ngong Forest is quickly becoming the most important test case for what could evolve into Kenya’s next phase of environmental management. More Than a Forest, A System Under Pressure Ngong Forest is not a single block of land. It is a connected ecosystem comprising Oloolua, Kibi...