Policy research enhances
dairy
opportunities in Kenyan highlands
More smallholder participation in markets
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Dairy
is an important enterprise throughout the densely populated highlands of
central |
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ILRI estimates dairy demand will increase 57% in the next 12 years, from 3,288
million litres in 1998 to 5,185 million litres in 2010.
This is part of an on-going dramatic rise in demand for livestock products in
developing countries that is being called a ‘Livestock Revolution’.
The Kenyan dairy market suffered a setback in the mid-1990s, when the parastatal marketing system collapsed.
But private firms and the informal sector are increasing their reach and
purchases of milk, restoring and expanding markets for small farmers.
Most of these households practice some stall feeding, with 37% ‘zero-grazed’ in
the intensive agricultural systems in the highlands. Herds average 4 cattle,
farm sizes, 1 hectare. Lack of high-quality feed is
the main constraint limiting milk production. Animal performance is relatively
poor, with average daily milk yields of 7.21 litres and an average calving
interval of 591 days.
Dairy and land use in the Kenyan highlands
Studies by ILRI, its collaborators and others show clearly that smallholder
dairy production is a key to sustainable land use in many parts of the Kenyan
highlands where land holding sizes are shrinking. Contrary to expectation by
some, as land holdings shrink the incentives for and advantages of keeping a
dairy cow increase. This is because on small land holdings, farmers may be
compelled to crop the same land bi-annually, year after year, to provide
subsistence food for their families. The nutrients and organic matter that
cattle manure provides is a key ingredient to sustaining this intensive
cultivation. Studies have shown that farms with dairy cattle have positive
balances of such important nutrients as nitrogen. Further, because feed can be
purchased or gathered from public land, small land holdings are not necessarily
a constraint to keeping cattle. Surveys across Central and
While livestock-based nutrient cycling contributes to sustainable land use
management, increasing dairy milk production and marketing provides a
sustainable economic enterprise and asset base, yielding a win-win situation in
terms of economic and resource sustainability.
However, there remain constraints to uptake of dairying, and consequently to
the sustainable land use possibilities that it offers. Poor road infrastructure
reduces milk prices dairy farmers obtain and the likelihood of farmers keeping
dairy cattle. The negative effects of poor feeder roads are particularly
significant. Poor commercial feed quality also hurts dairy producers. The
reduction of public services such as artificial insemination and veterinary
care have lowered the productivity of dairy animals and increased the risks
entailed in dairying. These constraints may be particularly severe for the
smallest farmers.
However, studies also show that economies of scale are insignificant in dairy
production in
INTERNATIONAL LIVESTOCK RESEARCH INSTITUTE
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Research in animal agriculture to reduce hunger, poverty and environmental
degradation in developing countries.