Daily Dispatch

SMART PHONES ASSIST IN KEEPING FARM STOCK ALIVE

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Mobile phone messages about rain from sophistica­ted weather-monitoring systems help farmers get water to their animals

For generation­s, Kaltuma Hassan’s clan studied the sky over Kenya’s arid north for any sign of rain – some wind here, a wisp of cloud there – to guide their parched livestock to water.

But such divination has been rendered hopeless by intensifyi­ng droughts. Days on foot can reveal nothing more than bonedry riverbeds and grazing land baked to dust, sounding the death knell for their herd.

“You might go a long distance, and they die on the way … It is a very hard life,” Hassan explained from Marsabit, a sparse and drought-prone expanse where millions of pastoral families depend entirely on livestock to survive.

Today, she leaves less to chance. The 42-year-old relies on detailed rainfall forecasts received via a text message from a Kenyan tech firm to plan her migrations, a simple but lifechangi­ng resource for an ancient community learning to adapt to increasing weather extremes.

Nomadic livestock herders in East Africa’s drylands have endured climate variabilit­y for millennia, driving their relentless search for water and pasture in some of the world’s most inhospitab­le terrain.

But their resilience is being severely tested by climate change, forcing a rethink of traditiona­l wisdom passed down for generation­s.

Kenya endures a severe drought every three to five years, the World Bank says, but they are increasing in frequency and intensity, and temperatur­es are rising too.

With conditions ever-more unreliable, Hassan no longer relies on warriors she once dispatched to scout for suitable grazing land for her cattle.

“They wake up very early in the morning and they look at the clouds, they look at the moon, to predict. I use this now,” she said, scrolling through customised weather updates on her phone, sent via SMS in Rendille, a local language.

The service uses advanced weather data from US agricultur­al intelligen­ce firm aWhere to provide subscriber­s with rain and forage conditions for the week ahead in their locality.

The forecasts are sent as text messages, so they are compatible with basic phones often used by pastoralis­ts in remote areas.

Kenyan IT firm Amfratech, which launched the SMS service earlier this year, has also rolled out a more advanced app-based version. They hope to eventually sign up tens of thousands of pastoralis­ts.

Rainfall, the difference between feast and famine in East Africa and the Horn, is more erratic than ever, arriving late or not at all.

A long dry spell can set a pastoral family back years and erode their capacity to handle future shocks, the UN’s Food and Agricultur­e Organisati­on said in a 2018 report. A second blow in quick succession can leave them teetering on starvation.

Such a crisis is already brewing in Kenya’s pastoral country to the north and over its borders in neighbouri­ng arid regions. This year’s so-called long rains failed to arrive, putting millions at risk.

The Famine Early Warning Systems Network has warned that hunger in pastoral areas will worsen in coming months.

“It doesn’t rain like it once did,” said Nandura Pokodo, at a dusty livestock market in Merille, an outpost in Kenya’s northern pastoralis­t heartland. Nobody wants his drought-weary animals, so he will return home empty-handed.

As the rains failed, Pokodo, 55, wandered for days between March and April in search of grazing land but found nothing. He lost 20 goats and sheep – a ruinous outcome for nomads whose fortunes are intertwine­d with their beasts.

The text messages have also helped Samuel Lkiangis Lekorima protect not just his livestock, but the safety of his community.

Longer, harsher droughts have stoked intense competitio­n between pastoralis­ts for ever scarcer water and pasture. A feud between two groups over a watering hole near Ethiopia, left 11 dead in May, local media reported.

Lekorima, a 22-year-old herder from Marsabit, said advance knowledge of rainfall helped keep his people wandering far, and avoid any potential tensions with distant clans.

“When I get that message, I phone people (and) tell them…don’t go far away, because there is rain soon.”

Other modern interventi­ons are also playing a part, helping protect not just pastoralis­ts but a sector that contribute­s more than 12% to Kenya’s GDP.

The Nairobi-based Internatio­nal Livestock Research Institute uses satellite imagery to determine when pasture levels are critically low – a portent of livestock death.

Some insurance products are linked to this index and issue payments before drought hits, so pastoralis­ts can buy enough fodder for lean times ahead. Tens of thousands of herders have signed up.

“A drought should no longer be an emergency,” said Thomas Were, of CTA, an EU-funded institutio­n which is driving a pastoralis­t-resilience project in Kenya and Ethiopia.

Helima Osman Bidu, a traditiona­l herder and mother of three, has joined a women’s collective that invests in nonlivesto­ck related enterprise­s, another approach to droughtpro­ofing the family finances.

“It is good to have something on the side,” she said , nodding to a padlocked metal box nearby containing the group’s seed money.

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 ?? Picture: AFP / TONY KARUMBA ?? SEASONED: Traditiona­l Samburu tribes people shelter in the shade of an acacia at Merille livestock market, some 411km north of Nairobi in Kenya’s Marsabit county last month. Nomadic livestock herders in East Africa’s drylands have endured climate variabilit­y for millennia.
Picture: AFP / TONY KARUMBA SEASONED: Traditiona­l Samburu tribes people shelter in the shade of an acacia at Merille livestock market, some 411km north of Nairobi in Kenya’s Marsabit county last month. Nomadic livestock herders in East Africa’s drylands have endured climate variabilit­y for millennia.

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