State Department for Irrigation Holds Kenya's Most Powerful Climate Adaptation Strategy
There was a time when geography determined destiny. Nations blessed with predictable rainfall harvested abundance while those trapped in the uncertainty of seasonal skies learned to live with scarcity. That world no longer exists. Climate change has flattened the old certainties just as globalization flattened markets. A drought in one grain-producing region now ricochets through international commodity exchanges before it reaches the dinner table of an ordinary Kenyan family. Volatile fertilizer prices, disrupted food supply chains, erratic rainfall patterns and rising temperatures have combined to expose a hard truth: rain-fed agriculture is no longer merely vulnerable; it has become an increasingly obsolete economic model for a nation seeking sustainable growth. This is why the conversation around sustainable irrigation in Kenya deserves to move beyond engineering diagrams and construction statistics. The State Department for Irrigation is not simply excavating dams or laying pipes ...