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The Inspiring Journey of Douglas Justus Wabuko

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  In every institution, there are individuals whose work rarely attracts public applause yet whose contributions quietly shape systems, protect rights, and strengthen governance. Such professionals often choose substance over spectacle, dedicating themselves to service with diligence, discipline, and unwavering integrity. Douglas Justus Wabuko belongs to this distinguished category of professionals. His journey from a law student with leadership ambitions to an Advocate of the High Court of Kenya and a Legal Officer in the County Government of Kakamega reflects a story of perseverance, professional growth, and commitment to public service. His career demonstrates how dedication to legal excellence can create meaningful impact across both private and public sectors. Through years of learning, practice, research, litigation, and legal advisory work, Wabuko has steadily built a reputation founded on competence, reliability, and commitment to justice. His story serves as an inspira...

How Daniel Nzonzo Uses Communication to Make Kenya's Irrigation Infrastructure Work

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There is a particular kind of silence that follows the completion of a great public works project. Engineers shake hands. Ministers pose for photographs. Press releases are dispatched. And then, sometimes, the infrastructure just sits. Canals run dry not from a lack of water, but from a lack of farmers who understand how to use them. Dams fill to capacity while the communities they were designed to rescue continue waiting. The machines work perfectly. The people do not know what to do next. Kenya has built some of Africa's most ambitious irrigation infrastructure over the past decade. The National Irrigation Authority, established in August 2019 as the successor to the National Irrigation Board that had governed the sector since 1966, oversees schemes spanning the breadth of the country, managing the transition of millions of acres from rain-fed uncertainty to the reliability of engineered water supply. The Mwea Irrigation Scheme in Kirinyaga County alone stretches across 30,600 ir...

CPA Ephantus Kimotho: The Accountant Who Wants to Feed Kenya

By Victor Oyuko  There is a certain irony in the fact that the man now engineering Kenya's most ambitious water-and-food transformation is, by training, a numbers person. CPA Ephantus Kimotho Kimani arrived at the State Department for Irrigation carrying the discipline of a certified public accountant ; a professional orientation built around precision, measurement, and accountability. What he found was a sector long treated as a rescue operation, something the government turned to only when the rains failed. He has spent the past two years dismantling that thinking. "Irrigation comes in as a mitigating factor," Kimotho has said. "When there is rain, we store water, and when there is drought, we use that water for irrigation." The words sound simple enough. The machinery behind them is not. A Professional Built Across Sectors CPA Kimotho's trajectory into public service is the kind that rewards scrutiny. Before he became one of President William Ruto's 5...

Stephen Nyaga's Case on Why Irrigation Is Ultimately an Economic Question

For decades, conversations about food security in Kenya have largely revolved around rainfall patterns, crop yields, fertilizer distribution, and farming technologies. While these factors undoubtedly matter, they only tell part of the story. Beneath every conversation about food production lies a more fundamental question; an economic question. The future of Kenyan agriculture is increasingly being shaped not merely by what farmers grow, but by how investments are made, how resources are allocated, how risks are managed, and how institutions finance long-term agricultural transformation. This reality becomes particularly evident whenever drought strikes. In periods of prolonged rainfall failure, food shortages emerge, prices rise, and government interventions become necessary. Yet what often goes unnoticed is that these crises are not simply failures of weather; they are failures of economic resilience . Countries that have successfully insulated themselves from climate volatility hav...

Behind The Plan That Could Change Kenyan Agriculture Forever

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When conversations about agriculture take place in Kenya, attention often gravitates toward visible outcomes. People speak about harvests, food prices, irrigation canals, dams, and markets because these are the results that directly affect households and livelihoods. Yet behind every successful agricultural transformation lies something less visible but infinitely more important: a plan. Before a single canal is excavated, before water reaches a farm, and before production increases, there must first be a clear vision that connects resources, institutions, infrastructure, and people toward a common objective. Throughout history, some of the world's most successful agricultural revolutions have not been driven by infrastructure alone but by long-term planning that anticipates future challenges and opportunities. The countries that successfully transformed their food systems understood that agricultural growth requires coordination, sequencing, financing, monitoring, and sustained co...

Can Kenya Finally Grow Enough Rice for Its Own People?

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  Kenya’s dependence on imported rice remains one of the most persistent contradictions in its agricultural story, especially in a country where vast tracts of land, water resources, and technical expertise are continuously being mobilized toward food security . Year after year, the country spends billions of shillings importing rice to meet domestic demand, a reality that exposes a structural gap between consumption patterns and local production capacity. This gap is not simply a matter of insufficient farming activity, but rather a reflection of deeper systemic constraints that have shaped rice production over decades, including limited irrigation coverage , fluctuating rainfall patterns, and uneven investment in production infrastructure. Within this context, rice has evolved from being just another staple food to becoming a symbol of Kenya’s broader food security challenge, where demand consistently outpaces local supply despite the existence of major irrigation schemes desi...

The Role of Communication In Delivering Kenya’s Irrigation Agenda

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  There is a curious paradox at the heart of Kenya’s development story. Some of the most transformative projects in the country touch millions of lives, consume billions of shillings in public investment, and hold the key to solving some of the nation’s most pressing challenges, yet they often remain largely invisible to the very people they are designed to serve. Irrigation is perhaps the clearest example of this paradox. While roads, airports, and major buildings naturally attract public attention, irrigation infrastructure quietly performs its work away from the spotlight, turning dry landscapes into productive farms, stabilizing food production, creating employment opportunities, and strengthening rural economies. Despite its enormous significance, the story of irrigation rarely receives the visibility it deserves. For many Kenyans, irrigation only enters public conversation during periods of drought, food shortages, or government announcements about new projects. Yet behind...