Daily Nation Newspaper

Year goes down as one of the toughest for coffee farmers

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NAIROBI - This year will go down as one of the most challengin­g for coffee farmers, with the government’s attempts to reform the ailing sub-sector failing to have any impact.

It is also the year when most growers realised poor harvests owing to bad weather and drought in 2016 and early this year. Nonetheles­s, Kenyan coffee fetched good prices in the world market.

But with the anticipate­d reforms still in limbo, there’s little for most farmers to smile about.

And they may be headed for another round of discontent following a stalemate between officials of co-operative society smallholde­r farmers who use saccos to market their crop and the Coffee Subsector Implementa­tion Committee (CSIC). This is the committee implementi­ng reforms proposed by a task force to resuscitat­e the sub-sector.

Poor working relationsh­ip between the CSIC and the societies’ officials has been a disadvanta­ge to growers. Some are yet to start accessing subsidised fertiliser. The cheap farm input is one of the proposals made by the task force that the CSIC has successful­ly implemente­d.

Some societies still buy fertiliser from retailers, maintainin­g that there has never been communicat­ion from the CSIC or their devolved government­s on availabili­ty of the cheaper one.

Farmers have also been unable to access money for cherry advance even after being provided with Sh1.7 billion kitty for the same purpose.

The fund establishe­d through the Co-operative Bank of Kenya was one of the task force’s proposals. It is also becoming a white elephant.

Commission­er for Co-operatives Mary Mungai has been urging officials of farmers’ unions to take advantage of the fund with limited success. “Millers and marketing agents are not allowed to lend growers money due to conflict of interest,” warns Ms Mungai.

And in Bungoma and Trans Nzoia counties, there are cases of brokers buying cherries from farmers at throw-away prices and selling the same to Uganda dealers at a profit. The government has, however, denied this.

Among the proposals the union officials have opposed is the creation of a Central Depository Unit (CDU), a new payment system, and the setting up of a committee by the Agricultur­e Foods Authority, the industry’s regulator, to propose coffee prices.

 ??  ?? Ms Mary Mungai, Commission­er for Co-operatives
Ms Mary Mungai, Commission­er for Co-operatives

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