By Moses Ndungu
The cooperative’s mandate is mainly to aggregate the farming communities by pooling them together and empowering them to take control of their farm’s enterprises, aggregation of farm produce and collective marketing to enhance their bargaining power and profit margins.
The Laikipia Produce and Marketing
Co-operative Society, based in Sipili town, Laikipia West Sub County has
started an ambitious plan to recruit 1000 members by December this year. The Arid Lands Information Network (ALIN) through
Ng’arua Maarifa Centre is supporting the recruitment plan.
Currently with a membership of 345,
the cooperative is targeting farmers from Sipili, Muhotetu, Karandi, and
Ol-Moran areas. The recruitment drive will also see the cooperative open three
new aggregation centers to complement the one in Sipili town.
Formed in 2013, the cooperative
emerged from the work undertaken by ALIN through Ng’arua Maarifa Centre with
the support of the Ford Foundation’s Expanding Livelihoods for Poor Households
Initiative (ELOPHI).
Some of the members being trained on good agricultural practices |
The cooperative’s mandate is mainly to aggregate the farming communities by pooling them together and empowering them to take control of their farm’s enterprises, aggregation of farm produce and collective marketing to enhance their bargaining power and profit margins.
Mr. Waweru Kanja, Chairman, Laikipia Produce,
and Marketing Cooperative Society said that the cooperative is keen to increase
farmer’s income and ensure food security thus alleviating poverty amongst smallholder
farmers.
He said that new members would be
able to enjoy free services that include: training in agribusiness; training in
maize, tomato, and tree tomato value chains; text messages on availability of
new stocks; aggregation of cereals; access to Home Grown School Feeding
Programme (HGSFP) market; and access to storage facilities.
Other benefits include: guaranteed
better market for members cereals; market commodities prices via Sokopepe;
training on Farm Record Management
Information System (FARMIS); extension services; and better prices for agro
inputs.
“Through seeds and fertilizer
services, the cooperative has been able to control market prices in Sipili Township,
reduced cases of fake seeds and boosted members bargaining power,” said Mr.
Kanja.
He said that the cooperative has been
linking smallholder farmers with a fair market like HGSFP and reducing
exploitation of farmers by traders. Formation of partnerships with input producers
has also helped the cooperative to secure farm inputs at fair prices thus
reducing member’s production cost.
He said that the support provided by
partners that include; ALIN, SNV- Netherlands Development
Organization, Kenya Seed Company Ltd,
MEA Ltd, Kilimo Biashara Profilers, Eastern African Grain Council (EAGC) and the
Ministry of Agriculture, Fisheries and Livestock has enabled them to undertake
a lot of activities on behalf of farmers.
Subsidized government fertilizer being offloaded into the cooperative store |
“We intend to become a leading farmer based organization by increasing the wealth,
food, and nutritional security of farmers. We are empowering smallholder
farmers with skills to aggregate farm produce and become agribusiness
oriented,” said Mr. Kanja.
As one of SNV’s Grain Business Hub
(GBH), the cooperative has been able to trade in grains efficiently,
effectively and sustainably. It has also been able to access other structured
grain markets.
Mr. Bob Aston from Ng’arua Maarifa
Centre noted that ALIN is keen to ensure members of the cooperative benefit
through SOKO+. The digital
commodity trading and information system links small-scale farmers to end
retailers/bulk purchasers of produce.
“SOKO+ has harnessed the power of
information and communication technologies by enabling farmers to efficiently
reach and exploit a fair market for their produce,” said Mr. Aston.
He said that the organization is also
keen to ensure members of the cooperative commercialize their farming
enterprises through use of FARMIS. The service provides farmers with a secure
environment to record, store, analyze and generate reports of their
agricultural enterprises.
“FARMIS gives farmers holistic
year-round monitoring, data collection, entry, storage, and mid-season analysis
to enable appropriate farm planning and sustainable market linkages,” said Mr.
Aston.
ALIN through Ng’arua Maarifa Centre
has been working with smallholder farmers in Laikipia West Sub County by
providing information and knowledge products focused on small-scale sustainable
agriculture, climate change, natural resources management (NRM), sustainable
land management (SLM), and markets.
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