What Eng. Kabuti Brings to Kenya's Irrigation Partnership With Portugal
There are moments in the life of a nation when a diplomatic meeting is not merely a meeting. It becomes a signal of where the future is being assembled. The recent high-level engagement between Kenya and Portugal in Lisbon belongs to that category. At first glance, it may appear as another bilateral discussion between governments pursuing mutual interests. In reality, it represents something much larger. It sits at the intersection of two forces reshaping the twenty-first century: the growing scarcity of water under climate change and the increasing search for productive investment opportunities capable of generating both economic returns and social resilience. Across the world, the old agricultural model is under strain. Rainfall patterns are becoming more erratic, droughts more prolonged, and competition for water more intense. Nations that once relied on predictable seasons are now confronting uncertainty as a permanent feature of economic planning. In this new reality, irri...