OPPORTUNITIES

Turn to agribusiness for income, youth urged

Nakuru county official says there are more returns in agriculture than formal employment

In Summary
  • Agriculture, Livestock and Fisheries executive Leonard Bor said there are more returns in agriculture than the traditional income sources such as formal employment.
  • He said the agriculture sector has a huge opportunity for employment creation that can help absorb hundreds of unemployed youths.
Tomatoes growing in a greenhouse
Tomatoes growing in a greenhouse

Young people from Nakuru county have been urged to turn to agriculture as one of the avenues where they can sustain themselves rather than looking to get employed in offices.

Agriculture, Livestock and Fisheries executive Leonard Bor said there are more returns in agriculture than the traditional income sources such as formal employment.

He said the agriculture sector has a huge opportunity for employment creation that can help absorb hundreds of unemployed youths and improve their livelihoods.

Bor said World Bank statistics indicate that youth in Kenya account for 35.4 per cent of the population. Of these, a million enter the labour market every year.

Yet, the official added, very few enter into farming despite the many opportunities that lie within the sector.

Speaking at the Nakuru Agricultural Show ground during capacity-building training for over 70 farmers from the 11 subcounties, Bor said that while the average age in Kenya is 19.5 years, the average age of a Kenyan farmer is 60, which raises doubts whether the country can be food secure when its most active population is not willing to participate in food production.

The executive said Governor Susan Kihika’s administration through public-private partnerships, was supporting digital innovations that offer an opportunity to attract youth to agriculture through digital platforms and innovations such as social media, apps, robotics, internet and artificial intelligence.

The farmers were trained on climate smart agriculture, avocado farming, pest and disease control, post-harvesting techniques, and local poultry farming.

Bor said the increasing rate of unemployment in the country is posing a threat to the county’s development and should therefore be tamed by helping young people join agribusiness.

 Young people under the age of 35 years make up 75 per cent of the Kenyan population according to the 2019 Kenya Population and Housing Census, thus being in a position to bring a shift in food production.

"These young people should be empowered to join the agriculture sector so that we tame unemployment as we increase our production,” Bor said.

The executive said the youth should do away with the mentality that agriculture is for the retirees and realise that even young people can do agriculture as a business. Agribusiness, he said, is a profession like any other and not for the unschooled or unemployed like many believe.

While noting that currently agriculture means more than subsistence farming, Bor said increased access to education and new forms of agriculture-based enterprise mean that young people can be a vital force for innovation in farming, increasing incomes and well-being for people in the society.

He advised the farmers to embrace new agricultural techniques to avoid losses as a result of climate change as well as to address issues of food security.

Bor said Kenya, just like the rest of the African continent, is losing its farmland productivity at a higher rate.

The Food Security pillar, he said can only be achieved if Conservation Agriculture is aggressively adopted by farmers, adding that the CA way has a new dimension in a period of climate change, calling for climate smart agriculture. 

“There is a need for sustained innovation in areas like drought resistant varieties of seeds, environment friendly farming practices and better post-harvest management to reduce losses. Dissemination of information to farmers across the country is also key in the implementation of climate proofing agricultural value chains,” the executive said.

He said farmers would realise high yields when they embrace climate-smart agriculture to wade through climate change, drought and flooding.

“Climate smart agriculture is the solution to these problems. It involves actions that sustainably increase productivity, enhance adaptation, reduce greenhouse emissions to a possible zero and enhance achievement of national food security and development goals. Responding to the impact of climate change takes a whole village,” he said.

The county government through Public-Private Partnerships, he affirmed would continue to equip farmers with adaptation practices on climate action, geared to increase food production hence, reducing the food prices.

He outlined climate smart agriculture practices as development and use of drought and heat tolerant potato varieties, finding use for waste products from farms, reduction of post-harvest losses through support of agricultural machinery, adoption of biological pesticides, conservation of agriculture practices such as zero tillage, and mulching and making use of waste material for biogas.

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