State to expand Ahero Irrigation Scheme at Sh80 million

A tractor harrowing a rice paddy at Mbega scheme in Ahero, Kisumu County, in preparation for planting on October 4, 2020.

Photo credit: Victor Raballa | Nation Media Group

What you need to know:

  • The expansion to be implemented by the National Irrigation Authority
  • Mr Tanui noted that the project will enable farmers to increase their output per acre and reduce their unit cost of production.

Rice production in Kenya is set to increase following proposals to expand Ahero Irrigation Scheme by an additional 2,500 acres.

The expansion to be done by the National Irrigation Authority will see the government pump in Sh80 million as it targets to open up area under rain-fed and irrigated rice.

The project is expected to produce 11,000 metric tonnes of rice annually valued at over Sh500 million.

West Kenya Irrigation Schemes Manager Joel Tanui indicated that this will be a big boost to the scheme which was operationalised in 1969 and has grown over the years to cover 13,000 acres of land. At least 7,000 farmers have benefitted from the project. 

 “We are looking to bring in farmers from Mbega and Kobong’o schemes within the larger Kano Plains in a project which is also expected to alleviate the perennial floods that has hit the region,” he said.

Farmers planting rice at Mbega in Ahero, Kisumu County, on October 4, 2020.

Photo credit: Victor Raballa | Nation Media Group

The situation has been made worse by backflow of water from Lake Victoria for close to a year now.  Over the years, he pointed out, Ahero Irrigation Scheme has seen an increase in need for expansion. 

“The ongoing expansion has created more jobs to locals who now take up jobs like weeding, planting and harvesting,” Mr Tanui stated, adding that the project will rope in 2,500 more farmers.

Mr Tanui noted that the project will enable farmers to increase their output per acre and reduce their unit cost of production.

Mr Philemon Amai, who has diversified into horticultural and sugarcane farming from Kobong’o scheme, is hoping to get good returns from his four-acre piece of land.

Horticulture

 “The unpredictable rain patterns have led to losses in the past, with the expansion, I am optimistic of making a good harvest,” he said.

In Mbega, farmers have embraced rice farming and have now cultivated more than 1,200 acres of land, while in Kobong’o, farmers have taken to horticulture, especially the growing of green grams.  

Irrigation is done by water pumped from the nearby River Nyando.  

The expansion of the second largest irrigation scheme in Kenya is likely to open up the agricultural potential of the region which has an estimated 490,000 acres against a developed area of 13,000 acres.