Why Kenya’s Irrigation Problem Was Never Just About Water
For years, Kenya’s irrigation conversation has been framed around a single idea. Water scarcity . The assumption has been repeated so often that it now feels unquestionable. If the country can store more water, harvest more water, and distribute more water, then food insecurity will gradually reduce and agricultural productivity will improve. At one level, that argument makes sense. Agriculture depends on water, and Kenya remains heavily reliant on rainfall patterns that have become increasingly unpredictable. Droughts disrupt livelihoods, crop failures trigger food shortages, and communities across arid and semi-arid regions continue to struggle with water access. However, the deeper one looks at the irrigation sector, the clearer it becomes that water alone was never the real problem. If it were, then every irrigation project with adequate water supply would automatically succeed. Every dam would translate into productivity. Every canal would create prosperity. Yet that has not...