The mass deaths, which mainly affected cage fish farmers, saw fish estimated at about five months littered across the shoreline, with locals worried about possible contamination. - Kenya breaking news ...
With fish ponds stocked with Nile tilapia and catfish fingerlings supplied under the Kenya Marine Fisheries Socio-Economic Development (KEMFSED) project, Mukoma says he finally sees a pathway to ...
AllAfrica on MSN
East Africa: Kisumu County Launches Operation to Clear Thousands of Dead Fish in Lake Victoria
The Kisumu County Government has launched an emergency operation to remove dead fish from Lake Victoria following a mass death of fish in 12 fish cages over the weekend.
For the farmer who spends months planting, weeding, and harvesting only to see her produce rot, it is despair.
Across Lake Victoria, the floating cage technology now supports at least 60,000 jobs, up from 34,000 two decades ago ...
Mongabay News on MSN
From shamba to PELIS: Kenyan farmers derive livelihoods from government timber plantations
A Monday morning finds 50 members of the Nzoia Community Forest Association trekking through rain-drenched thickets in the ...
As ancient routes are disrupted, animals are finding roads, homes, oil wells in their way. Butterflies are fading from ...
Fresh fruits are the most affected by food loss in Kenya, with up to 56 per cent wasted before reaching consumers. A new report by World Resources Institute (WRI) Africa, Food Loss and Waste in Maize, ...
The Star on MSN
Most of Kenya’s food goes to waste as millions suffer hunger
Kenya can comfortably feed more than seven million people every year, inject Sh36 billion back into the economy, and cut over seven million tonnes of carbon emissions if it reduces food loss and waste ...
Reduced losses mean higher margins, improved supply chain efficiency, and stronger brand credibility. For farmers, less waste ...
allAfrica.com on MSN
Kenya Losing 40% of Food Produced Each Year, WRI Report Warns
Kenya is losing up to 40 percent of the food it produces each year--about nine million tons valued at Sh 72 billion (US$578 million)--even as one in four citizens struggles daily to secure enough to ...
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