Watering More Acres: Kenya Expands Irrigation Schemes for Food Security - Expansion of Existing Irrigation Schemes
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Watering More Acres: Kenya Expands Irrigation Schemes for Food Security

Expansion of Existing Irrigation Schemes
Kenya's agricultural sector is set to receive a significant boost with the expansion of existing irrigation schemes. The government is investing in the upgrade and enlargement of key irrigation projects to increase water coverage, improve crop yields, and enha...
Published
Dec 1, 2025
Published By
Andrew Teyie
Progress
71% Complete
Expected Completion
Aug 1, 2027

Story Overview

Public-facing summary of this government priority project.

Kenya's agricultural sector is set to receive a significant boost with the expansion of existing irrigation schemes. The government is investing in the upgrade and enlargement of key irrigation projects to increase water coverage, improve crop yields, and enhance food security

Why It Matters

How this intervention contributes to public value.

Expanding existing irrigation schemes in Kenya is one of the most high-impact interventions the country can make to achieve food security, reduce poverty, improve climate resilience, and drive economic growth.

Implementation Progress

Current implementation status and expected completion.
Completion Status 71%

Key Benefits

Expected or realized public benefits.
Kenya is heavily dependent on rain-fed agriculture

Rainfall is increasingly unreliable due to climate change: longer droughts, erratic onset/cessation of rains, and flash floods.

Poverty reduction and job creation

Irrigation schemes have very high economic returns: Benefit–Cost Ratios often 3–8:1 (World Bank & government studies).

Foreign exchange savings and earnings

Kenya currently imports 1 million tonnes of maize, wheat, and rice in bad years, costing hundreds of millions of dollars. Expanded domestic irrigated production directly reduces this import bill. At the same time, high-value irrigated horticulture (vegetables, flowers, fruits) is already Kenya’s second-largest foreign exchange earner after tourism.