How Irrigation PS Kimotho Is Solving Problems Nobody Sees
Most people notice development when something physical appears. A new road. A bridge. A dam rising from dry land. These are visible signs of government activity and they naturally attract attention because they can be photographed, launched, and measured in concrete terms. What the public rarely sees are the invisible systems beneath those projects. The policies that guide implementation. The institutional arrangements that determine who does what. The coordination failures that quietly slow progress. The outdated frameworks that continue operating long after circumstances have changed. Yet these invisible structures often determine whether a project succeeds long after the ribbon-cutting ceremonies end. This is especially true in irrigation. In Kenya, irrigation is usually discussed through the language of expansion. More dams. More acreage under irrigation. More food production. More investment. These are important ambitions, particularly for a country still heavily dependent o...