Turkana County in Kenya taps into groundnut farming

0
1386

Turkana County in Kenya is set to tap into groundnut farming. County Director for Agriculture Paul Lokone made the announcement and said the country is on the path to becoming a large-scale producing county.

The plan is due to a European Union funded project which envisages putting 2,500 acres of land by the end of this year under groundnut cultivation and progressively expanding the acreage under production to 7,400 acres by 2025.

Positive results

Lokone said in order to reach the 7,400 acres intended for the project across the county, irrigation schemes will have to set aside some portion of their land for groundnut farming. He cited Nakwamoru and Elelea farms as examples from which encouraging results have been witnessed.

A total of 300 farmers are currently engaged in the program among them youth and women groups who have been trained and supplied with 14 tonnes of quality seed variety to kick start the programme. The farmers’ recruitment to the program will also include sensitization on the commercialization of groundnut farming and formation of cooperative societies as part of the production value chain.

Speaking on behalf of the implementing partners, Mr Michael Ngutu from FAO said the partners are committed to supporting the implementation of the programme to its conclusion. Mr Ngutu challenged farmers in Turkana to make the plan a success adding that both the local and international market for groundnuts was sufficiently lucrative and open to new entrants.