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Dairy Development in Kenya: The past, the
present and the future
From the Summary
Large increases in demand for milk and dairy products in developing
countries are projected for the next 25 years. These represent
exciting market opportunities for smallholders, such as those
in Kenya, which has over 85% of the dairy cattle population
in eastern Africa. Currently Kenya's per capita availability
of milk is four to seven times higher than the other countries
in the region. The widespread adoption of dairy cattle by
smallholders in Kenya was stimulated by several interacting
factors: smallholder communities who kept cattle and who had
milk as an important part of their diet; a sub-tropical geography
suitable for dairy cattle; the presence of significant dairy
populations (owned by settler farmers); and the conducive
policy and institutional environments provided by successive
Governments.
Today most of Kenya's three million dairy cattle are kept
by smallholders in crop-livestock systems in areas of high
and medium cropping potential. Generally one to two dairy
cows (mostly Holstein Friesian or Ayrshire) comprise 50% of
the herd, the other half consisting of female calves and heifers.
In the high potential areas feeding is mainly cut-and-carry
with planted Napier grass (Pennisetum purpureum) and crop
residues, especially from maize and bananas, supplemented
by forages gathered from common properties around the farm
or purchased from neighbours. On average, total daily milk
output is 10 kg per farm, of which a quarter is for home consumption
and the rest sold. In the late 1980s, milk sales were mainly
through local dairy cooperative societies, with some to neighbours.
However, following market liberalisation in 1992, marketing
channels have diversified. It is estimated that approximately
85% to 90% of marketed milk is not processed or packaged,
but instead is bought by the consumer in raw form. The factors
driving the continued importance of the informal market are
traditional preferences for fresh raw milk (which is boiled
before consumption), and consumers' unwillingness to pay the
costs of processing and packaging. Raw milk markets offer
both higher prices to producers and lower prices to consumers.
These markets also provide valuable opportunities for rural
and urban employment.
In Kenya, therefore, as elsewhere in the tropics, market-oriented
smallholder dairy farms are concentrated close to urban consumption
centres because the effects of the market over-ride many production
factors. Less proximate production occurs only in those regions
where there is an efficient market infrastructure. As infrastructure
develops, markets become more efficient and urban consumers
develop stronger preferences for pasteurised milk, the advantages
of proximity will be reduced and production may well move
away from intensive peri-urban systems and shift to more extensive
systems (as the New Zealand dairy industry illustrates on
a global scale).
Until these infra-structural improvements occur, and because
of the ready availability of cheap human capital (labour)
and the relative expense of financial capital, smallholder
dairy production and informal raw milk marketing are likely
to predominate for the foreseeable future. Consequently it
is anticipated in the medium term (10 to 15 years) that the
industrialised model of dairy production, processing and marketing
will remain a minor contributor to the dairy sub-sector in
Kenya and elsewhere in the region.
| Author: |
Thorpe, W., Muriuki, H.G., Omore, A., Owango,
M.O. and Staal, S. |
| Date: |
2000a |
| Type of publication: |
Paper presented at the Annual Symposium
of the Animal Production Society of Kenya (APSK). Theme:
Challenges to Animal Production in this Millennium, KARI
Headquarters, Nairobi, 22-23 March 2000 |
| Publisher: |
Smallholder Dairy (Research and Development)
Project Research Report |
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Available on-line
at:
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www.smallholderdairy.org/publications/Conference/Thorpe%20et%20al-2000-Dairy%20dev%20past%20present%20future-APSK.pdf |
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