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Nguruman Farmers Optimistic after PS Kimotho Inspects Project

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On Tuesday, 3 February 2026, the Nguruman plains in Kajiado West Constituency offered more than a routine project stopover. Principal Secretary for Irrigation, CPA Ephantus Kimotho, CBS , was on site to inspect the Nguruman Irrigation Project , but the visit carried broader policy significance. It reflected how Kenya’s irrigation agenda is increasingly being framed not as isolated infrastructure delivery, but as a system-wide response to climate risk, food insecurity, and rural livelihoods. The inspection brought together beneficiary farmers, local leaders, technical officers, and implementing stakeholders. Its purpose was straightforward but consequential. The Principal Secretary assessed the status of ongoing rehabilitation works, reviewed progress against project objectives, and listened directly to community feedback on how the project is reshaping agricultural production and household incomes. In doing so, the visit reinforced a recurring theme in PS Kimotho’s approach to irri...

Why Nguruman Scheme is a blueprint for Climate Adaptation

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In the semi-arid heart of Kajiado County, where climate uncertainty has long shaped both livelihoods and limits, the Nguruman Irrigation Scheme is quietly redefining how Kenya thinks about adaptation, food security, and rural development. Along the banks of the Ewaso Ng’iro River , a project once viewed as a local intervention is increasingly being read as a national policy statement: that irrigation, when designed as climate infrastructure rather than emergency relief, can anchor resilience in some of the country’s most vulnerable landscapes. For decades, Nguruman has lived with contradiction. Fertile soils and year-round sunlight offered promise, yet the same river that sustained agriculture repeatedly erased it. Seasonal floods washed away crops and homesteads, while prolonged dry spells left farmers exposed to the volatility of rain-fed agriculture. The result was a cycle of loss that discouraged investment and locked households into subsistence production. The current phase o...

PS Kimotho urges Bridging Funding Gaps to Accelerate Irrigation

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  Kenya’s irrigation ambition is clear, deliberate, and increasingly urgent. Yet between policy intent and water reaching farms lies a persistent obstacle that Irrigation Principal Secretary Ephantus Kimotho has repeatedly and consistently articulated: the funding gap. This gap is not abstract. It is measurable, structural, and consequential. It determines whether irrigation plans remain well-written documents or become functioning systems that secure food, stabilise rural incomes, and shield the country from climate shocks. Over the past few years, PS Kimotho has framed irrigation financing not as a budgeting inconvenience but as a national development constraint. His argument has been consistent across forums, stakeholder engagements, and policy platforms. Kenya does not suffer from a lack of irrigation potential. It suffers from fragmented, insufficient, and poorly structured financing for irrigation infrastructure and services. The Scale of the Irrigation Ambition Kenya’s ir...

PS Kimotho Deepens Climate-Smart Partnerships With Global Green Growth Institute

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The Government has continued to position irrigation at the centre of Kenya’s climate response and food security strategy, with the State Department for Irrigation steadily opening new pathways for sustainable investment, innovation, and collaboration. This direction was clearly reflected when Irrigation Principal Secretary Ephantus Kimotho hosted a delegation from the Global Green Growth Institute at Maji House in Nairobi, an engagement that went beyond courtesy and into the substance of how Kenya can future-proof its irrigation sector. The meeting brought together policy leadership and global expertise at a time when irrigation is no longer viewed simply as a means of boosting crop yields, but as a critical tool for climate adaptation , rural transformation, and inclusive economic growth. For PS Kimotho, the engagement aligned squarely with the department’s broader push to translate national plans into practical, bankable, and climate-resilient solutions for farmers across the c...

Kenya starts new Irrigation phase as PS Kimotho Steers Mega Dams

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  Kenya is entering a defining phase in its irrigation and water security journey as the State Department for Irrigation prepares to roll out one of the most ambitious infrastructure programmes in its history.  In 2026, six mega dams are scheduled for construction across different regions of the country, signalling a decisive shift towards large-scale, planned irrigation as a pillar of national development. Anchored within the Government’s broader food security and climate resilience agenda, the programme reflects a growing recognition that water infrastructure is not merely a technical investment, but a strategic economic and social imperative. At the centre of this transition is the Principal Secretary for Irrigation, CPA Ephantus Kimotho, whose stewardship has increasingly emphasised scale, coordination, and long-term impact. The planned dams—Lowaat in Turkana, Radat in Baringo, Thuci in Embu, Basingila in Isiolo, High Falls serving Kitui and Tharaka Nithi, and the Galana ...

Kenya Shifts to Data-Driven Water Governance with WAD Tool Integration

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Kenya ’s irrigation and water governance architecture is undergoing a decisive transformation as the State Department for Irrigation accelerates the shift towards data-driven , digitally enabled decision-making.  This transition was underscored by the formal handover of the Water Availability and Demand (WAD) Tool from the International Water Management Institute (IWMI) to the National Irrigation Authority (NIA), an institutional milestone that signals a new phase in how water resources are planned, allocated, and managed for national development. Presiding over the engagement, the Principal Secretary for Irrigation, CPA Ephantus Kimotho , reaffirmed the Government’s commitment to embedding credible, science-based data at the centre of irrigation planning and investment decisions.  The adoption of the WAD Tool represents a move away from fragmented assessments and pilot-driven interventions, towards an integrated system capable of supporting large-scale, climate-resilien...

PS Kimotho Chairs High-Level Engagement to Unlock Athi/Galana Dam

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Kenya’s bold transition from rain-fed agriculture to reliable, large-scale irrigated farming took a significant step forward today as the Principal Secretary, State Department for Irrigation, CPA Ephantus Kimotho , chaired a high-level stakeholders’ engagement meeting on the construction of the Athi/Galana Dam . The project is a flagship initiative under the Presidential Declaration to construct fifty (50) mega dams across the country , a transformative agenda aimed at expanding irrigation infrastructure, enhancing national food security, and strengthening climate resilience. The Athi/Galana Dam is strategically positioned as one of the most consequential water infrastructure investments in Kenya’s history. Designed to support large-scale agricultural production and integrated water use, the dam will play a central role in unlocking the full potential of the Galana Kulalu Food Security Project , one of the country’s most ambitious agricultural undertakings. A KSh 40 Billion Mileston...