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