How PS Kimotho Turned Forest Marathons into Kenya's Water Strategy
The twenty-first century will not divide nations simply between those that possess natural resources and those that do not. Instead, it will increasingly separate countries that understand the invisible economic architecture sustaining those resources from those that mistake abundance for permanence. Kenya's greatest strategic asset is therefore not merely its fertile soils or entrepreneurial people, but the ecological systems that quietly manufacture every river feeding farms, industries and households. The State Department for Irrigation occupies a uniquely important position within this equation because it sits at the point where environmental stewardship becomes measurable economic productivity, transforming rainfall into reliable infrastructure that underwrites national food security and rural prosperity. That reality explains why the Tenth Kaptagat Integrated Conservation Initiative deserves to be understood less as another tree-planting exercise than as a sophisticated inves...