John Kibati, a 56-year-old rice farmer in Murinduko, Kirinyaga
county, is a disturbed man.
His three-bedroom house is no longer enough for his family
and several bags of rice from the past two harvests.
“I hoped to sell my harvest to pay school fees for my
daughters. I have several bags, both at home and at my cooperative society’s
depot. It hurts to hear that the government is planning to import more instead
of buying our stock,’’ Kibati tells the Star.
Another farmer, who identified herself as Wa Mugo, on the
other hand, says that she is forced to sell in small quantities at a throwaway
price, fearing that the value will drop further once imports flood the market.
“I sell a kilo for as low as Sh60 per kilo to brokers who
are having a field day in Kirinyaga. The amount is insufficient to cover the
production cost. I look forward to a day when rice farmers in this country will
be listened to.”
A spot check by the Star shows that while farmers sell their
produce at a throwaway price, imports are sold at a high rate, with a two-kg
packet of Daawat Delli Basmati, for instance, going for Sh560 while the same
quantity of Sunrice Basmati retailing at an average price of Sh740.
Ndege Muriuki is a key figure in the Mwea rice farming
community in Kenya, serving as the chairman of the Mwea Rice Growers Multipurpose
Co-operative Society.
He has been actively involved in addressing challenges faced
by rice farmers, particularly regarding the disposal of their harvest and the
impact of rice imports.
"It is true we have so much rice in our stores which
has not been sold and it may go to waste if urgent measures are not taken. We
have at least 5,000 tonnes," he said.
The farmers called on the government to intervene so that
they would not incur heavy losses.
Ndege noted that the Kenya National Trading Corporation,
which was directed by the government to buy rice at Sh85 per kilogramme since
2022, has kept away from the area.
The KNTC is not purchasing rice the way it used to do and
farmers are suffering," he said.
The Mwea Irrigation Scheme is Kenya's largest rice-producing
area, with over 7,000 farmers contributing to the national rice supply.
On Friday, Agriculture CS, Mutahi Kagwe, warned that the
country is staring at a possible spike in food prices and an acute rice
shortage if the courts uphold a petition seeking to block the importation of
500,000 tonnes of duty-free rice.
According to Kagwe, Kenya’s annual demand for rice stands at
about 1.3 million tonnes against a domestic production of just 20 per cent,
leaving a deficit of more than 80 per cent, roughly 1 million tonnes, that is
bridged mainly through imports.
He warned that the current retail price of Grade 1 milled
white rice has already surged to between Sh190 and Sh220 per kilogramme, a
steep rise from last year’s duty-free period average of Sh150 per kilogramme.
“If duty-free imports are blocked, the prices are likely to
soar further, deepening the cost-of-living crisis,” Kagwe said.
Kagwe noted that projections showed that Kenya’s rice
consumption per capita in 2025 is expected to reach 29kgs, with the population
estimated at 54.79 million.
This, he added, translates to a national requirement of
about 1.5 million tonnes of rice for the year, or roughly 125,000 tonnes per
month.
The country will need about 625,000 tonnes between July and
December 2025 alone.
The Ministry of Agriculture disclosed that a 2020
presidential directive designated the Kenya National Trading Corporation as the
lead agency to mop up excess locally produced rice for supply to government
institutions, a policy that has since paid Mwea farmers Sh2.6 billion for
18,500 tonnes of pishori rice and another Sh948 million to Sindano rice farmers
for 7,900 tonnes.
He stressed that over 95 per cent of imported rice is
non-basmati and therefore does not compete with the high-value pishori grown
locally, which targets a niche market.
“Previous importations have not depressed prices. They have
stabilised them,” Kagwe said, warning that without imports, shortages could
push consumers to maize, wheat and potatoes, triggering a chain reaction of
food price hikes.
Economic Survey 2025 indicates the area cropped in rice
schemes increased from 38,942 hectares in 2022-23 to 43,057 hectares in 2023-24.
Consequently, the number of plot holders increased from
27,812 in 2022-23 to 29,108 in 2023-24. Payment to plot holders increased by
13.0 per cent, to Sh11.8 billion compared to Sh10.5 billion in 2022-23.
Paddy production recorded a growth of 23.2 per cent to 282.2
thousand tonnes in 2024, primarily due to the expansion of acreage under
irrigation.
During the period under review, Taveta clusters, Anyiko,
Kimira, Oluch and Nanundu Manya were looped into rice production through the
support of the National Irrigation Authority in rehabilitation of the existing
irrigation infrastructure and construction of new structures to support rice
production.
Paddy production from the Bura irrigation scheme declined by
38.0 per cent to 5,600 tonnes in 2023-24 because of drought during the year.
The Tana irrigation scheme also recorded a decline in paddy
production from 4,942 tonnes in 2022-23 to 3,440 tonnes in 2023-24.
The drought severely affected the River Tana water flow,
which affected water intake in the Bura irrigation scheme, leading to decreased
acreages under production as well as the yields.
Kenya imports the majority of its rice from India and
Pakistan. Other markets include Thailand, Tanzania and Myanmar. In 2023, India
accounted for 68 per cent of Kenya's rice imports, while Pakistan accounted for
26 per cent.
Several politicians, mostly drawn from the opposition, have
joined farmers to oppose the import.
Irungu Nyakera, Farmers Party leader, is one of the
politicians who have called out the state’s plan to import a sizeable bulk of
rice.
In a press statement dated August 11, Nyakera praised the court
for halting the importation of 500,000 tonnes of duty-free rice worth over Sh50
billion.
“This is a win for our farmers, our economy and our
sovereignty. God bless the Farmers Party and its bold leadership. We shouldn't
import cheap rice when our rice is rotting in stores,’’ Nyakera said.
Opposition leaders Martha Karua (PLP), Eugene Wamalwa
(DAP-K) and Kalonzo Musyoka (Wiper) have slammed the plan, calling it a “scheme
to swindle billions” through shadowy cartels.
Speaking at a press event, Karua accused the current
administration of orchestrating systemic harm to both the economy and citizens.
Kirinyaga Governor, Anne Waiguru, is also opposed to the
import plan until the government buys all local production.
Waiguru said while it is understandable that the country
does not produce enough rice to meet the national demand, it is only imperative
that priority is given to local rice farmers.
She warned that the planned importation of 500,000 tonnes of
milled white rice announced in a notice by Cabinet Secretary for the National
Treasury, John Mbadi, would hurt Mwea rice farmers.
“Before you import rice from outside, just note that our
stores are full of rice and we ask that you first buy that one and then import
to meet the deficit,” she said, noting that as a governor, she cannot sit back
and watch farmers from the county suffer.
This is not the first time the government has been fighting
with farmers over food importation.
Last year, the government imported 500,000 tonnes. Three
months later, after it emerged that a consignment totaling two million
kilogrammes, which had been declared unfit for human consumption, was diverted
into the market.
Documents obtained from the Kenya Bureau of Standards show
that the rice that was imported from Pakistan in September and October had
failed the aflatoxin tests as it contained higher levels than locally
permissible.