Kenyan farmers suffer as COVID-19, locust invasion threatens harvest
COVID-19 pandemic has
slowed the importation process leading to an inadequate supply of pesticides
and equipment
The novel coronavirus
disease (COVID-19) pandemic has become a major cause of worry for farmers in
Kenya unable to sell their produce.
According to data from the
agriculture ministry, vegetables and fruits markets have been functioning in
limited capacity, with exporters shipping only 25-30 per cent of their normal
capacity.
Several farmers on
contract have reported losses as their produce is not being collected from
their farms. Due to the lockdown in most
countries in Europe, flower farms in Kenya have lost 70 per cent of their
income in March.
Things have become more difficult in areas affected by locusts. Swarms were first reported in Kenya on December
28, 2019, having crossed the border from Somalia. Currently, desert locusts
have invaded vegetation in 26 of the 47 counties in the country.
The country began work on controlling locusts in January,
2020. The agriculture ministry received Shilling 530 million from the national
treasury to control desert locust spread, Cabinet Secretary for
Agriculture, Livestock, Fisheries and Cooperative, Peter Munya, said during a
media briefing.
“We are focusing on these areas as we continue aerial
spraying,” said Munya.
The COVID-19 pandemic has slowed importation process leading
to an inadequate supply of pesticides and equipment. But everything is not
lost.
When the locust invasion began, protocols to locate, tag and
monitor desert locusts breeding sites were put in place. In February, the
United Nations-Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO) trained 600 national
youth servicemen for ground locust control operations.
“The pandemic lockdown has not affected their work because
they are moving with security. They are offering essential services that are
still operational,” agriculture principal secretary Hamadi Boga said.
There are plans to strengthen Kenya government’s desert locust
control measures by training 30 trainers by April-end.
“We have divided them into two groups. The first group
was trained last week and the remaining one is currently being trained,” said
Boga.
They would then train 900 local operations team in the
affected counties. These teams would carry out ground surveillance and control
activities play a critical role in relaying data to control bases.
Kenya was warned about impeding locust invasion in February
2019. The FAO had said in a report that swarms could migrate
from Yemen to Kenya and the Horn of Africa by the end of 2019 in the worst-case
scenario.
“This could have adverse impacts on the agricultural seasonal
yields and local economies, affecting food security and livelihoods of
populations in the countries concerned, unless urgent preventive and control
measures are established in the region,” the report said.
But Kenya failed to act on the warnings. The country is
already experiencing food insecurity made worse by heavy rains that started in
October 2019 and lasted till January 2020. The pandemic is only making things
worse.
“We are putting more focus on desert areas as we
continue with aerial spraying. We have since received two additional aircraft
from South Africa. Now we have nine such aircraft. One is for surveillance
and the other for spraying,” Munya said.
Source
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