Bridging the Regulatory
Gap
for Small-Scale Milk Traders
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Traditional milk markets supply over 80% of marketed milk
in Kenya.
The same smallholder dominance is seen in other countries of the South, such as
Tanzania (98%), Nicaragua (86%) and India (83%), now the largest dairy
producer in the world.
Although most milk marketed in Kenya
passes through informal market channels, government policies don’t adequately
meet the concerns of the small farmers, traders and poor consumers who make up
these channels. Informal markets
sell cheaper milk for poor consumers, satisfy traditional tastes and offer
better prices for milk producers. Public officials, however, tend to adopt
international food-quality-assurance standards. These Western models of dairy
development have actively discouraged small milk market agents and have often
led to lower quality products delivered to consumers.
Research conducted by the Smallholder Dairy Project (SDP), a research and
development project conducted jointly by the Kenya Ministry of Livestock
Development, the Kenya Agricultural Research Institute, and the International
Livestock Research Institute (ILRI), set out to answer two questions: Can policy and technology can help bridge the gap between
regulated and unregulated markets? Can training and licensing
rather than policing can be offered to improve milk safety in
traditional markets?
This SDP meets a need of the Kenyan dairy development authorities for
science-based information. The information produced by the Project is providing
the authorities with a sound basis on which to develop equitable and locally
derived food-safety-assurance regulations and standards. The Project focuses on
changing mind-sets as well as written policy. It is disseminating facts about
the health risks of the ‘raw’ milk market (generated in a collaborative risk
analysis project) and conducting training courses in the use of appropriate
milk handling methods and certification procedures. The Project worked with
small milk traders to develop a new milk can that meets their specific
milk-handling needs. The Project is also completing training guidelines to help
the small traders get licensed.
The SDP has already helped provoke changes in the policy environment regarding
raw milk marketing. It is now widely accepted by stakeholders that most milk in
Kenya
will continue for some time to be marketed and consumed without having first
been industrially pasteurised. Acceptance of this fact is reflected in both Kenya’s new
Dairy Development Policy and its revised Dairy Bill, which explicitly recognise the predominance of the raw milk trade and provide
institutional guidelines supportive of the small-scale production and marketing
of milk. Once this Bill is passed (expected by the end of 2004), the regulatory
authority collaborating in the Project will consider training and certifying
market agents who currently do not qualify to receive trading licenses on the
basis of poor hygiene. Besides traders, this Project is benefiting an estimated
one million poor producers, who gain greater access to milk markets, and poor
consumers, who gain access to more hygienic milk sold at more competitive
prices.
Members of the Consultative Group on International Agricultural Research, which
support ILRI, played a critical role in the pro-poor transformation of Kenya’s
dairy policies through ILRI’s Market-oriented
Smallholder Dairy (MOSD) Project, which helped the collaborative SDP design
research studies, assessed technical impacts, analysed risks, and provided
strategic lessons learnt through participation in similar projects in other developing
countries.
A key message of the MOSD for several years now has been that dairy development
in the South needs to focus on raising the welfare of small-scale farmers and
market agents and meeting the needs of poor consumers rather than striving to
adopt Western dairy models. Evidence the MOSD has gathered indicates that this
approach promises greater benefits to the poor without compromising consumer
health (most of the unpasteurised milk sold in Kenya is boiled before it is consumed) or formal
dairy development (important for Kenya’s development of export
markets).
This Smallholder Dairy Project is funded by the UK Department for International
Development. The University
of Nairobi and the Kenya
Medical Research Institute undertook intensive research lasting two years to
provide the required risk information. Following the conclusion of that
collaborative risk analysis in 2001, the SDP invited the official regulator,
the Kenya Dairy Board, as well as the Ministry of Health and an international
dairy development NGO, Land O’Lakes, to engage with
them in discussions with small traders of potential solutions to the problems
they face, such as frequent milk spoilage and official harassment. With
additional funding from the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United
Nations, these partners provided the milk traders with training in milk
handling. In a participatory manner with the traders, they developed a new milk
container, produced by a local manufacturer, that
meets the needs of small traders. The partners measured the impacts of the
training and the use of the newly fabricated milk-handling containers. Land O’Lakes and the Kenya Dairy Board are using the lessons
learnt and outputs of this exercise for greater outreach to Kenya’s dairy
smallholders.
Kenya’s
small milk traders are enthusiastically participating in this Project. They are
attending training sessions, purchasing new milk cans and helping to develop
new training guidelines. National programmes are being designed to train and
license the traders using these guidelines once current regulatory bottlenecks
are removed. The Kenya Dairy Board, which will be the main player in this
exercise, has already responded by forming a Dairy Public Health Advisory
Committee that incorporates public-sector representatives and industrial
processors to oversee the implementation of this activity and various other
options to improve milk quality. Land O’Lakes
co-funds activities to test innovations in the field.
The beneficiaries of the innovative collaborative work of the SDP are Kenya’s many
small entrepreneur milk traders whose businesses are hurt by inappropriate
regulations and whose voices have not been heard before. Through their
participation in this Project, the traders are organising themselves for the
first time to influence dairy policies. They know now they have the ability to
speak up and be heard. They know they are now recognised by national policy
makers as the very backbone of Kenya’s
thriving dairy sector.
INTERNATIONAL LIVESTOCK RESEARCH
INSTITUTE
________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Research in animal agriculture to reduce hunger, poverty and environmental
degradation in developing countries.
Box
30709, Nairobi, Kenya Phone
(254-20) 422-3000 Fax (254-20) 422-3001 Email ILRI-Kenya@cgiar.org
Web www.ilri.org