How Strategic Partnerships Are Reshaping Irrigation Development in Kenya
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...