Kenya

IFAD Asset Request Portlet

Country

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The Context

Around seven in ten Kenyans live in rural areas, half of whom live in poverty. Kenya became a low-middle-income country in 2014. However, poverty and income inequality remain persistent challenges. Approximately 3.5 million Kenyans need food assistance. 

Kenya’s population has more than tripled over the past 30 years, resulting in dependence on rapidly depleting natural resources. This impacts women in particular, as they shoulder a greater responsibility for providing food, water and fuelwood.

Agriculture is the backbone of Kenya’s economy, making up a third of annual GDP and employing 70 per cent of rural people. Kenya has one of the largest dairy sectors in sub-Saharan Africa, accounting for 4 per cent of GDP.

Climate change threatens the agriculture sector, with its economic costs estimated at 2.6 per cent of GDP per year by 2030. With crop production relying on rainfall and almost half of animal production occurring in arid and semi-arid lands, drought and unreliable rainfall are significantly impacting agriculture.

The Strategy

IFAD supports Kenya’s Agriculture Sector Transformation and Growth Strategy (2019-2029) by providing loans to smallholders and actors along the dairy and cereal value chains, including small traders and food processors. IFAD also improves access to rural financial services.

The country strategic opportunities programme for 2020-2025 aims to improve:

  • Climate-resilient and community-based natural resource management;
  • Access to productivity-enhancing assets, technologies, finance and services;
  • Access to post-production technologies and markets.

IFAD is extending its support beyond productive rural areas to the country's arid and semi-arid lands. This shift supports the government's commitment to improve small-scale irrigation, extension services, marketing and access to financial services in areas with high poverty rates. The emphasis is on a market-oriented approach in the horticulture, dairy, cereal and rural finance sectors.

Country Facts

Kenya has a population of 48 million people.

The agriculture sector employs 71 per cent of the rural population and accounting for about 69.7 per cent of export earnings.

About 1.3 million households keep dairy cattle.

Country documents

Conteúdo Relacionado

Republic of Kenya Country strategic opportunities programme 2020-2025 Tipo: Country Strategic Opportunities Programme
Região: East and Southern Africa

Country Experts

Projects and Programmes

Projects Browser

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Rural Kenya Financial Inclusion Facility

cost: $142.60 million-allcapital-abbreviation

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Kenya Livestock Commercialization Project

cost: $93.50 million-allcapital-abbreviation

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Aquaculture Business Development Programme

cost: $144.50 million-allcapital-abbreviation

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Smallholder Horticulture Marketing Programme

cost: $26.59 million-allcapital-abbreviation

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Smallholder Dairy Commercialization Programme

cost: $40.02 million-allcapital-abbreviation

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Southern Nyanza Community Development Project

cost: $23.74 million-allcapital-abbreviation

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Second National Agricultural Extension Project

cost: $37.22 million-allcapital-abbreviation

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Coast Arid and Semi Arid Lands Development Project

cost: $17.44 million-allcapital-abbreviation

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Farmers' Groups and Community Support Project

cost: $12.66 million-allcapital-abbreviation

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Kwale and Kilifi District Development Project

cost: $8.03 million-allcapital-abbreviation

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Animal Health Services Rehabilitation Programme

cost: $38.49 million-allcapital-abbreviation

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National Extension Project

cost: $27.56 million-allcapital-abbreviation

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Second Integrated Agricultural Development Project

cost: $16.08 million-allcapital-abbreviation

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Digital solutions for rural development: STARLIT case studies

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This diagnostic provides an assessment of Kenya’s remittance market, especially in light of the COVID-19 pandemic, using a market-oriented approach.

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Strengthening sorghum and millet value chains for food, nutritional and income security in arid and semi‑arid lands of Kenya and United Republic of Tanzania (SOMNI)

Novembro 2020
Sorghum, finger millet and pearl millet are the most important staple foods for most households in the semi-arid tropics of East Africa, as these crops grow in harsh environments where other crops do not grow well.

Kenya: Country Technical Note on Indigenous Peoples Issues

Abril 2012
The Republic of Kenya has a multi-ethnic population, among which more than 25 communities identify as indigenous.

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This episode of Recipes for Change is about cooking with sorghum - a crop that has been neglected in Kenya in favour of the more popular maize. Now, with low rainfall causing maize harvests to fail, drought-tolerant sorghum is making a resurgence and celebrity chef Ali Artiste sees how sorghum recipes are being rediscovered in rural areas.

IFAD and Shamba Shape-Up

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With the fourth and latest series of Shamba Shape-Up, Kenya's most watched agriculture TV show, IFAD staff have been talking to smallholder farmers about a range of practical issues, from cow care and livestock resilience to climate-change adaption.