Cotton farming John Kamau's take

Clemens

Elder Lister
Once upon a time, cotton was a vital source of foreign exchange. It was known as white gold. But on Friday, when a few governors and senators met ostensibly to oppose reforms in various agriculture sectors, they did not even mention cotton. Not that they support reforms in cotton industry. They did not have a view, or position, on it.

Actually, without wasting time on cartel-embedding statements, this country’s agriculture sector has all along been held hostage by cartels who continue to resist farmers’ efforts to stop the fun and halt the eating culture. And they, the cartels, have their tenterhooks in both the value chain and government institutions that they have captured. The august House has not been spared either. Enough said.

So forgotten is the cotton industry that when you look at the country’s cotton belt, you see unbridled poverty, age-old failure to streamline policy in the sector, and iron-fisted cartels, which have even sold farmers’ ginneries.

We all watched as cotton production and ginning suffered the inefficiency and corruption at the Cotton Seed and Lint Marketing Board and, still, we have not found our way out. You only need to look at the collapsed Kisumu Cotton Mills or the Nanyuki-based Mount Kenya Textiles, whose equipment was vandalised, to see this mayhem and wanton destruction of an industry.

So vibrant was the sector that it had some of the best football clubs in the country: Kenya Taitex Mills of Thika, Kicomi FC, Rivatex FC and Mountex of Nanyuki.

Cotton used to grow in Kisumu, Baringo, Busia, Pokot, Nanyuki, Kitui, Tana River and many by other regions, and was the fifth-largest foreign exchange earner, accounting for over 24 per cent of the gross domestic product.
Advertisement

Cotton, Kenya’s ‘white gold’ that has been left in tatters
Sunday October 25 2020
Cotton used to grow in Kisumu, Baringo, Busia, Pokot, Nanyuki, Kitui and Tana River, and was the fifth-largest foreign exchange earner.



Cotton, Kenya’s ‘white gold’ left in tatters
File | Nation Media Group
By JOHN KAMAU

More by this Author

IN SUMMARY
So forgotten is the cotton industry that when you look at the country’s cotton belt, you see unbridled poverty, age-old failure to streamline policy in the sector, and iron-fisted cartels, which have even sold farmers’ ginneries.
Actually, in 2018 there was a global cotton deficit of 1.5 million tonnes from the largest exporting countries led by China, US and India.
When the first textile mill was opened in Kisumu in 1965, the idea was to support the regional farmers with a cash crop with high demand.
Advertisement

Once upon a time, cotton was a vital source of foreign exchange. It was known as white gold. But on Friday, when a few governors and senators met ostensibly to oppose reforms in various agriculture sectors, they did not even mention cotton. Not that they support reforms in cotton industry. They did not have a view, or position, on it.

Actually, without wasting time on cartel-embedding statements, this country’s agriculture sector has all along been held hostage by cartels who continue to resist farmers’ efforts to stop the fun and halt the eating culture. And they, the cartels, have their tenterhooks in both the value chain and government institutions that they have captured. The august House has not been spared either. Enough said.

So forgotten is the cotton industry that when you look at the country’s cotton belt, you see unbridled poverty, age-old failure to streamline policy in the sector, and iron-fisted cartels, which have even sold farmers’ ginneries.

We all watched as cotton production and ginning suffered the inefficiency and corruption at the Cotton Seed and Lint Marketing Board and, still, we have not found our way out. You only need to look at the collapsed Kisumu Cotton Mills or the Nanyuki-based Mount Kenya Textiles, whose equipment was vandalised, to see this mayhem and wanton destruction of an industry.

So vibrant was the sector that it had some of the best football clubs in the country: Kenya Taitex Mills of Thika, Kicomi FC, Rivatex FC and Mountex of Nanyuki.

Cotton used to grow in Kisumu, Baringo, Busia, Pokot, Nanyuki, Kitui, Tana River and many other regions, and was the fifth-largest foreign exchange earner, accounting for over 24 per cent of the gross domestic product.

High-protein meal
As the most widely used natural fibre in textiles, cotton supports a $3 trillion (Sh300 trillion) global fashion industry and is loved by leading brands. Also, cotton seeds produce a high-protein meal used to feed livestock and is regarded as the most wide-spread profitable non-food crop in the world.

In essence, the cotton belt has the potential to have livestock feed industries and employ thousands of our youth.

So why, for the umpteenth time, have we neglected our cotton belt? Let nobody say there is no market. Actually, in 2018 there was a global cotton deficit of 1.5 million tonnes from the largest exporting countries led by China, US and India.

Advertisement

Other countries have built textile industries by importing cotton and these include China, Bangladesh, and Vietnam where some of the leading brands Adidas, H&M, IKEA, Kering, Levi’s, Lindex, M&S, and Nike make their products.

Today, Kenya imports 80 per cent of the cotton it processes from neighbouring countries, like Uganda. Yes, Uganda. If we had a working cotton industry we could deliver to the industries within the Export Processing Zone (EPZ) where brands such as Puma, Wal-Mart, JC Penny, H&M source some of their garments from.

There was a time that factories such as Kisumu Cotton Mills (Kicomi), Rivatex, Raymond Woollen Mills, and Thika Cotton Mills relied on our cotton. We can still do it.

We have seen the return of Rivatex, the textile factory based in Eldoret, and President Kenyatta has now popularised their colourful shirts as he leads the Made in Kenya initiative. But Rivatex is only a fraction, a good story, of what should be done going forward. At the county level, you need to appreciate what Governor Charity Ngilu is doing with locally made garments through the Kitui County Textile Centre.

Kicomi founder
When the first textile mill was opened in Kisumu in 1965, the idea was to support the regional farmers with a cash crop with high demand. That is how the Khatau Group from India, regarded as one of the oldest business conglomerates in Asia, was invited by Jomo Kenyatta to start an industry in Kenya and he laid the foundation stone for the plant on July 28, 1964.

Kisumu’s modern-day Pamba Road was named Dharamsey Khatau Road in honour of Kicomi’s founder – while the road leading to the plant is known as Kicomi Road; an indicator of how the textile industry drove fortunes in the lake city.

Then in 1969, we saw the arrival in Eldoret of Raymond Woollen Mills, which at one point was Kenya’s largest textile complex. Though not a cotton complex, per se, Raymonds was then processing wool, making synthetic suits, blankets and ready to wear garments. Its blankets were so popular and were a constant reminder of Made in Kenya products.

Raymond was followed in Eldoret with Rift Valley Textile Mills (Rivatex), which was a joint venture between the government and European multinationals. But Rivatex soon became a case study of corruption as obsolete equipment was purchased and installed.

Again, the quality of garments for local markets was inferior to those destined to international market, yet they were demanding protection from international competitors.

Before independence, cotton farming was practised by large-scale colonial farmers and but the Jomo Kenyatta government encouraged locals to grow the crop and supported the purchase of ginneries through cooperatives.

That is how the first decade after independence saw the cotton sector grow while the government adopted policies that supported the growth of the industry by, among others, controlling marketing and fixing farm-gate cotton prices.

It also increased its investment in textile mills and saw to the expansion of land under cotton by sending extension services to the farms.

County governments, in cotton growing areas, have not taken advantage of the devolved function by streamlining this crop in their counties. Why? Nobody knows.

We have had many opportunities under the African Growth and Opportunities Act (Agoa) where Kenyan textiles could enter the US market. In the US, cotton is taken seriously because it was the foundation of the country’s economy.

What is required is a regulatory framework to support the industry. When the Cotton Board collapsed in 1991, the regulation, licensing and control of the ginneries was left with no institution to control it and farmers were abandoned with a crop that had turned to be the source of their poverty.

More so, the quality control of seeds vanished and farmers were left to import uncertified seeds from Uganda and when these failed, they were left with grazing fields.

Ginneries auctioned
There were various cotton ginneries across the country, which were run by these farmers under cooperatives but they were either auctioned by the banks, and Cooperative Bank led from the front, or simply collapsed and were left to rot.

After some private entities took over the farmers’ ginneries, and sold some as scrap metal, the Cotton Board was left with no role.

An institutional vacuum had, thus, been created. But, interestingly, the Cotton Lint and Seed Marketing Board was retained in the statutes, even though there was nothing on the ground and its officers continued to get salaries and board members a sitting allowance. Talk of heist.

Liberalisation caught many of the firms unawares and shortly after 1990, most of the firms in Nairobi, Mombasa, Nanyuki and Kisumu collapsed as imports replaced locally manufactured products. Those that remained started importing wool and cotton and forgot about the farmers; after the liberalisation policy which was hailed by International Monetary Fund as the panacea to our problems was pushed into us.

Soon, secondhand clothes flooded our markets at a time when the industry was starting to face a slow death. It was hoped that after the liberalisation of the sector, the new ginneries owners would support the growth of the sector and buy cotton from local farmers. But the private investors were not interested. The high-yielding seeds vanished and farmers were left with cotton that had no buyer.

How much would Tana River County gain from cotton farming? We had a huge cotton irrigation project there and in Baringo. But all these lands are being wasted. Previous whistle-start, whistle-stop formulas have not helped either. Today, cotton is under the Fibre Crops Directorate which is neither here nor there.

Once upon a time, the textile and clothing industry was the second largest employer after the civil service. In 2003, shortly after Mwai Kibaki came to power, the government while nominating various personalities for the boards of parastatals forgot that Cotton Lint and Seed Marketing Board existed. That is how far we had gone down.

Recently, the mitumba traders made interesting proposals: to be allowed to grow cotton and start their own ginneries to phase off the importation of second-hand clothes. It can be done, but only if the governors are not wasting time digging for war rather than helping the agriculture sector grow.

[email protected] @johnkamau1
 

Clemens

Elder Lister
Pia uliona Muranga would rather Delmonte close shop, they grab that land and build malls, hio kama ingepita ama ikipita Kakuzi pia wachore saba
That midget governor and his advisers are bad news, thanks for the national government intervention in the issue.

In Kenya a farmer and a Matatu owner only eat after all the rest have eaten.
 

Montecarlo

Elder Lister
Once upon a time, cotton was a vital source of foreign exchange. It was known as white gold. But on Friday, when a few governors and senators met ostensibly to oppose reforms in various agriculture sectors, they did not even mention cotton. Not that they support reforms in cotton industry. They did not have a view, or position, on it.

Actually, without wasting time on cartel-embedding statements, this country’s agriculture sector has all along been held hostage by cartels who continue to resist farmers’ efforts to stop the fun and halt the eating culture. And they, the cartels, have their tenterhooks in both the value chain and government institutions that they have captured. The august House has not been spared either. Enough said.

So forgotten is the cotton industry that when you look at the country’s cotton belt, you see unbridled poverty, age-old failure to streamline policy in the sector, and iron-fisted cartels, which have even sold farmers’ ginneries.

We all watched as cotton production and ginning suffered the inefficiency and corruption at the Cotton Seed and Lint Marketing Board and, still, we have not found our way out. You only need to look at the collapsed Kisumu Cotton Mills or the Nanyuki-based Mount Kenya Textiles, whose equipment was vandalised, to see this mayhem and wanton destruction of an industry.

So vibrant was the sector that it had some of the best football clubs in the country: Kenya Taitex Mills of Thika, Kicomi FC, Rivatex FC and Mountex of Nanyuki.

Cotton used to grow in Kisumu, Baringo, Busia, Pokot, Nanyuki, Kitui, Tana River and many by other regions, and was the fifth-largest foreign exchange earner, accounting for over 24 per cent of the gross domestic product.
Advertisement

Cotton, Kenya’s ‘white gold’ that has been left in tatters
Sunday October 25 2020
Cotton used to grow in Kisumu, Baringo, Busia, Pokot, Nanyuki, Kitui and Tana River, and was the fifth-largest foreign exchange earner.



Cotton, Kenya’s ‘white gold’ left in tatters
File | Nation Media Group
By JOHN KAMAU

More by this Author

IN SUMMARY
So forgotten is the cotton industry that when you look at the country’s cotton belt, you see unbridled poverty, age-old failure to streamline policy in the sector, and iron-fisted cartels, which have even sold farmers’ ginneries.
Actually, in 2018 there was a global cotton deficit of 1.5 million tonnes from the largest exporting countries led by China, US and India.
When the first textile mill was opened in Kisumu in 1965, the idea was to support the regional farmers with a cash crop with high demand.
Advertisement

Once upon a time, cotton was a vital source of foreign exchange. It was known as white gold. But on Friday, when a few governors and senators met ostensibly to oppose reforms in various agriculture sectors, they did not even mention cotton. Not that they support reforms in cotton industry. They did not have a view, or position, on it.

Actually, without wasting time on cartel-embedding statements, this country’s agriculture sector has all along been held hostage by cartels who continue to resist farmers’ efforts to stop the fun and halt the eating culture. And they, the cartels, have their tenterhooks in both the value chain and government institutions that they have captured. The august House has not been spared either. Enough said.

So forgotten is the cotton industry that when you look at the country’s cotton belt, you see unbridled poverty, age-old failure to streamline policy in the sector, and iron-fisted cartels, which have even sold farmers’ ginneries.

We all watched as cotton production and ginning suffered the inefficiency and corruption at the Cotton Seed and Lint Marketing Board and, still, we have not found our way out. You only need to look at the collapsed Kisumu Cotton Mills or the Nanyuki-based Mount Kenya Textiles, whose equipment was vandalised, to see this mayhem and wanton destruction of an industry.

So vibrant was the sector that it had some of the best football clubs in the country: Kenya Taitex Mills of Thika, Kicomi FC, Rivatex FC and Mountex of Nanyuki.

Cotton used to grow in Kisumu, Baringo, Busia, Pokot, Nanyuki, Kitui, Tana River and many other regions, and was the fifth-largest foreign exchange earner, accounting for over 24 per cent of the gross domestic product.

High-protein meal
As the most widely used natural fibre in textiles, cotton supports a $3 trillion (Sh300 trillion) global fashion industry and is loved by leading brands. Also, cotton seeds produce a high-protein meal used to feed livestock and is regarded as the most wide-spread profitable non-food crop in the world.

In essence, the cotton belt has the potential to have livestock feed industries and employ thousands of our youth.

So why, for the umpteenth time, have we neglected our cotton belt? Let nobody say there is no market. Actually, in 2018 there was a global cotton deficit of 1.5 million tonnes from the largest exporting countries led by China, US and India.

Advertisement

Other countries have built textile industries by importing cotton and these include China, Bangladesh, and Vietnam where some of the leading brands Adidas, H&M, IKEA, Kering, Levi’s, Lindex, M&S, and Nike make their products.

Today, Kenya imports 80 per cent of the cotton it processes from neighbouring countries, like Uganda. Yes, Uganda. If we had a working cotton industry we could deliver to the industries within the Export Processing Zone (EPZ) where brands such as Puma, Wal-Mart, JC Penny, H&M source some of their garments from.

There was a time that factories such as Kisumu Cotton Mills (Kicomi), Rivatex, Raymond Woollen Mills, and Thika Cotton Mills relied on our cotton. We can still do it.

We have seen the return of Rivatex, the textile factory based in Eldoret, and President Kenyatta has now popularised their colourful shirts as he leads the Made in Kenya initiative. But Rivatex is only a fraction, a good story, of what should be done going forward. At the county level, you need to appreciate what Governor Charity Ngilu is doing with locally made garments through the Kitui County Textile Centre.

Kicomi founder
When the first textile mill was opened in Kisumu in 1965, the idea was to support the regional farmers with a cash crop with high demand. That is how the Khatau Group from India, regarded as one of the oldest business conglomerates in Asia, was invited by Jomo Kenyatta to start an industry in Kenya and he laid the foundation stone for the plant on July 28, 1964.

Kisumu’s modern-day Pamba Road was named Dharamsey Khatau Road in honour of Kicomi’s founder – while the road leading to the plant is known as Kicomi Road; an indicator of how the textile industry drove fortunes in the lake city.

Then in 1969, we saw the arrival in Eldoret of Raymond Woollen Mills, which at one point was Kenya’s largest textile complex. Though not a cotton complex, per se, Raymonds was then processing wool, making synthetic suits, blankets and ready to wear garments. Its blankets were so popular and were a constant reminder of Made in Kenya products.

Raymond was followed in Eldoret with Rift Valley Textile Mills (Rivatex), which was a joint venture between the government and European multinationals. But Rivatex soon became a case study of corruption as obsolete equipment was purchased and installed.

Again, the quality of garments for local markets was inferior to those destined to international market, yet they were demanding protection from international competitors.

Before independence, cotton farming was practised by large-scale colonial farmers and but the Jomo Kenyatta government encouraged locals to grow the crop and supported the purchase of ginneries through cooperatives.

That is how the first decade after independence saw the cotton sector grow while the government adopted policies that supported the growth of the industry by, among others, controlling marketing and fixing farm-gate cotton prices.

It also increased its investment in textile mills and saw to the expansion of land under cotton by sending extension services to the farms.

County governments, in cotton growing areas, have not taken advantage of the devolved function by streamlining this crop in their counties. Why? Nobody knows.

We have had many opportunities under the African Growth and Opportunities Act (Agoa) where Kenyan textiles could enter the US market. In the US, cotton is taken seriously because it was the foundation of the country’s economy.

What is required is a regulatory framework to support the industry. When the Cotton Board collapsed in 1991, the regulation, licensing and control of the ginneries was left with no institution to control it and farmers were abandoned with a crop that had turned to be the source of their poverty.

More so, the quality control of seeds vanished and farmers were left to import uncertified seeds from Uganda and when these failed, they were left with grazing fields.

Ginneries auctioned
There were various cotton ginneries across the country, which were run by these farmers under cooperatives but they were either auctioned by the banks, and Cooperative Bank led from the front, or simply collapsed and were left to rot.

After some private entities took over the farmers’ ginneries, and sold some as scrap metal, the Cotton Board was left with no role.

An institutional vacuum had, thus, been created. But, interestingly, the Cotton Lint and Seed Marketing Board was retained in the statutes, even though there was nothing on the ground and its officers continued to get salaries and board members a sitting allowance. Talk of heist.

Liberalisation caught many of the firms unawares and shortly after 1990, most of the firms in Nairobi, Mombasa, Nanyuki and Kisumu collapsed as imports replaced locally manufactured products. Those that remained started importing wool and cotton and forgot about the farmers; after the liberalisation policy which was hailed by International Monetary Fund as the panacea to our problems was pushed into us.

Soon, secondhand clothes flooded our markets at a time when the industry was starting to face a slow death. It was hoped that after the liberalisation of the sector, the new ginneries owners would support the growth of the sector and buy cotton from local farmers. But the private investors were not interested. The high-yielding seeds vanished and farmers were left with cotton that had no buyer.

How much would Tana River County gain from cotton farming? We had a huge cotton irrigation project there and in Baringo. But all these lands are being wasted. Previous whistle-start, whistle-stop formulas have not helped either. Today, cotton is under the Fibre Crops Directorate which is neither here nor there.

Once upon a time, the textile and clothing industry was the second largest employer after the civil service. In 2003, shortly after Mwai Kibaki came to power, the government while nominating various personalities for the boards of parastatals forgot that Cotton Lint and Seed Marketing Board existed. That is how far we had gone down.

Recently, the mitumba traders made interesting proposals: to be allowed to grow cotton and start their own ginneries to phase off the importation of second-hand clothes. It can be done, but only if the governors are not wasting time digging for war rather than helping the agriculture sector grow.

[email protected] @johnkamau1
Don't worry. BBI will help remind the govt mandarins o the importance of agriculture. It not only cotton even cashew nut farming in Mombasa and Pyrethrum Farming in central....sit tight once they appoint the PM govt will function seamlessly you will think the gods are amongst us working as civil servants
 

Clemens

Elder Lister
Don't worry. BBI will help remind the govt mandarins o the importance of agriculture. It not only cotton even cashew nut farming in Mombasa and Pyrethrum Farming in central....sit tight once they appoint the PM govt will function seamlessly you will think the gods are amongst us working as civil servants
BBI must be laced with the elixir of life. Where has it been since independence? or it's a case of 'don't mend it if it isn't broken?'.
 

upepo

Elder Lister
Pia uliona Muranga would rather Delmonte close shop, they grab that land and build malls, hio kama ingepita ama ikipita Kakuzi pia wachore saba
That midget governor and his advisers are bad news, thanks for the national government intervention in the issue.

In Kenya a farmer and a Matatu owner only eat after all the rest have eaten.
The sad thing is we will drain the dams and build posh home on quarter acre plots .Then ten years down the line we will be sourcing food from Somalia .
What you fail to realize is that several decades from now, your kids will be buying that land from an American at inflated prices to build the same slums you so much fear. Giving your land out for free for one hundred years is not a light thing to do. This is what will happen if the leases are renewed; an impatient generation will arise at some point, invade the land forcefully, and the country will end up paying more than the market prices for the land to the Americans. The legal repossession should not be about putting the land to a different use but giving the ownership back to the people. The farming may continue but the ownership should belong to the people such that the companies cannot decide to sell the land to other parties in future. As the situation stands today, Delmonte is eyeing the sale value of the land rather than its agricultural potential. That land will be sold off to citizens in less than a few decades. The population pressure in some regions cannot support huge plantations for another 100 years. The policies you are advocating for are responsible for inflation and the sky-high land prices in the country, which have discouraged many outside investors. No industrial investor wants to tie a huge chunk of his investment in land when the same money could be put to better use.
 
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The.Black.Templar

Elder Lister
Staff member
What you fail to realize is that several decades from now, your kids will be buying that land from an American at inflated prices to build the same slums you so much fear. Giving your land out for free for one hundred years is not a light thing to do. This is what will happen if the leases are renewed; an impatient generation will arise at some point, invade the land forcefully, and the country will end up paying more than the market prices for the land to the Americans. The legal repossession should not be about putting the land to a different use but giving the ownership back to the people. The farming may continue but the ownership should belong to the people such that the companies cannot decide to sell the land to other parties in future. As the situation stands today, Delmonte is eyeing the sale value of the land rather than its agricultural potential. That land will be sold off to citizens in less than a few decades. The population pressure in some regions cannot support huge plantations for another 100 years. The policies you are advocating for are responsible for inflation and the sky-high land prices in the country, which have discouraged many outside investors. No industrial investor wants to tie a huge chunk of his investment in land when the same money could be put to better use.
You seem to be very uninformed, why dont you say that about the land uhuru and his mother owns, do you know that not too far from Delmonte and close to Nairobi infact they own more than 10,000 acres just there lying idle.

Contrast that and tell me about the thousands of people permanently employed by delmonte and the millions of retirees who are getting their pension because delmonte had employed them, think about the families that get supported through that employment. How many jobs can be supported through getting that land and giving it out to Kenyans and politicians who only want to build hiuses and resell them ama just build useless malls?
 

upepo

Elder Lister
You seem to be very uninformed, why dont you say that about the land uhuru and his mother owns, do you know that not too far from Delmonte and close to Nairobi infact they own more than 10,000 acres just there lying idle.
There is a huge difference here. Citizens can take Uhuru's land anytime and get away with it. Not so for Delmonte. They will sue for billions of dollars. The employment you are talking about is not exactly a benefit. People sweat and toil to exchange their labour for wages. The two thousand jobs Delmonte provides could easily be provided by enterprises using 1% of that land. Again the issue is not about farming; it is about ownership of that land. What will those few employees do once the company sells off the land? Why give out land to a foreigner today knowing that you will be forced to buy it back tomorrow?
 

The.Black.Templar

Elder Lister
Staff member
There is a huge difference here. Citizens can take Uhuru's land anytime and get away with it. Not so for Delmonte. They will sue for billions of dollars. The employment you are talking about is not exactly a benefit. People sweat and toil to exchange their labour for wages. The two thousand jobs Delmonte provides could easily be provided by enterprises using 1% of that land. Again the issue is not about farming; it is about ownership of that land. What will those few employees do once the company sells off the land? Why give out land to a foreigner today knowing that you will be forced to buy it back tomorrow?
First lets establish facts, are they selling the land ama you are making up situations? Second there are enterprises that offer employement to millions just using 1 acre like safaricom, but Delmonte's business is farming and they are utilising that land 100%, so your argument does not hold water there either.
 

upepo

Elder Lister
First lets establish facts, are they selling the land ama you are making up situations?
They have been selling land (for instance the land around Ananas mall, including the mall) and will continue to do so in the future as the demand happens. Once they have a lease, nothing prevents them from cashing in on the land. Coffee farms, such as Tatu and Socfinaf, have done so recently. An average- sized industry, such as Bidco, easily employs 1000 people. Delmont employs about 2000 people full-time plus 4000 seasonal workers (not millions of workers). Hundreds of investors worldwide would be ready to enter into investment agreements that do not involve loss of land ownership. Again, the issue is about ownership not use. How about they continue using the land but the ownership remains with the county government?
 
Last edited:

The.Black.Templar

Elder Lister
Staff member
They have been selling land (for instance the land around Ananas mall, including the mall) and will continue to do so in the future as the demand happens. Once they have a lease, nothing prevents them from cashing in on the land. Coffee farms, such as Tatu and Socfinaf, have done so recently. An average- sized industry, such as Bidco, easily employs 1000 people. Delmont employs about 2000 people full-time plus 4000 seasonal workers (not millions of workers). Hundreds of investors worldwide would be ready to enter into investment agreements that do not involve loss of land ownership. Again, the issue is about ownership not use. How about they continue using the land but the ownership remains with the county government?
You are talking about different kinds of businesses, using your logic i can also argue that Bidco does not deserve that land because a company like safaricom uses less land and employs alot more people than bidco, why do you think that is the case? Delmontes business is large scale commercial farming and they are utilising 100% of the land.

I dont believe that story of delmonte selling land to ananas mall but if it were true, was it illegal?

I guess what you are trying to say is the government should disallow or make it illegal for people who have land leases from selling the land?
 

Pamba 1

Elder Lister
Once upon a time, cotton was a vital source of foreign exchange. It was known as white gold. But on Friday, when a few governors and senators met ostensibly to oppose reforms in various agriculture sectors, they did not even mention cotton. Not that they support reforms in cotton industry. They did not have a view, or position, on it.

Actually, without wasting time on cartel-embedding statements, this country’s agriculture sector has all along been held hostage by cartels who continue to resist farmers’ efforts to stop the fun and halt the eating culture. And they, the cartels, have their tenterhooks in both the value chain and government institutions that they have captured. The august House has not been spared either. Enough said.

So forgotten is the cotton industry that when you look at the country’s cotton belt, you see unbridled poverty, age-old failure to streamline policy in the sector, and iron-fisted cartels, which have even sold farmers’ ginneries.

We all watched as cotton production and ginning suffered the inefficiency and corruption at the Cotton Seed and Lint Marketing Board and, still, we have not found our way out. You only need to look at the collapsed Kisumu Cotton Mills or the Nanyuki-based Mount Kenya Textiles, whose equipment was vandalised, to see this mayhem and wanton destruction of an industry.

So vibrant was the sector that it had some of the best football clubs in the country: Kenya Taitex Mills of Thika, Kicomi FC, Rivatex FC and Mountex of Nanyuki.

Cotton used to grow in Kisumu, Baringo, Busia, Pokot, Nanyuki, Kitui, Tana River and many by other regions, and was the fifth-largest foreign exchange earner, accounting for over 24 per cent of the gross domestic product.
Advertisement

Cotton, Kenya’s ‘white gold’ that has been left in tatters
Sunday October 25 2020
Cotton used to grow in Kisumu, Baringo, Busia, Pokot, Nanyuki, Kitui and Tana River, and was the fifth-largest foreign exchange earner.



Cotton, Kenya’s ‘white gold’ left in tatters
File | Nation Media Group
By JOHN KAMAU

More by this Author

IN SUMMARY
So forgotten is the cotton industry that when you look at the country’s cotton belt, you see unbridled poverty, age-old failure to streamline policy in the sector, and iron-fisted cartels, which have even sold farmers’ ginneries.
Actually, in 2018 there was a global cotton deficit of 1.5 million tonnes from the largest exporting countries led by China, US and India.
When the first textile mill was opened in Kisumu in 1965, the idea was to support the regional farmers with a cash crop with high demand.
Advertisement

Once upon a time, cotton was a vital source of foreign exchange. It was known as white gold. But on Friday, when a few governors and senators met ostensibly to oppose reforms in various agriculture sectors, they did not even mention cotton. Not that they support reforms in cotton industry. They did not have a view, or position, on it.

Actually, without wasting time on cartel-embedding statements, this country’s agriculture sector has all along been held hostage by cartels who continue to resist farmers’ efforts to stop the fun and halt the eating culture. And they, the cartels, have their tenterhooks in both the value chain and government institutions that they have captured. The august House has not been spared either. Enough said.

So forgotten is the cotton industry that when you look at the country’s cotton belt, you see unbridled poverty, age-old failure to streamline policy in the sector, and iron-fisted cartels, which have even sold farmers’ ginneries.

We all watched as cotton production and ginning suffered the inefficiency and corruption at the Cotton Seed and Lint Marketing Board and, still, we have not found our way out. You only need to look at the collapsed Kisumu Cotton Mills or the Nanyuki-based Mount Kenya Textiles, whose equipment was vandalised, to see this mayhem and wanton destruction of an industry.

So vibrant was the sector that it had some of the best football clubs in the country: Kenya Taitex Mills of Thika, Kicomi FC, Rivatex FC and Mountex of Nanyuki.

Cotton used to grow in Kisumu, Baringo, Busia, Pokot, Nanyuki, Kitui, Tana River and many other regions, and was the fifth-largest foreign exchange earner, accounting for over 24 per cent of the gross domestic product.

High-protein meal
As the most widely used natural fibre in textiles, cotton supports a $3 trillion (Sh300 trillion) global fashion industry and is loved by leading brands. Also, cotton seeds produce a high-protein meal used to feed livestock and is regarded as the most wide-spread profitable non-food crop in the world.

In essence, the cotton belt has the potential to have livestock feed industries and employ thousands of our youth.

So why, for the umpteenth time, have we neglected our cotton belt? Let nobody say there is no market. Actually, in 2018 there was a global cotton deficit of 1.5 million tonnes from the largest exporting countries led by China, US and India.

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Other countries have built textile industries by importing cotton and these include China, Bangladesh, and Vietnam where some of the leading brands Adidas, H&M, IKEA, Kering, Levi’s, Lindex, M&S, and Nike make their products.

Today, Kenya imports 80 per cent of the cotton it processes from neighbouring countries, like Uganda. Yes, Uganda. If we had a working cotton industry we could deliver to the industries within the Export Processing Zone (EPZ) where brands such as Puma, Wal-Mart, JC Penny, H&M source some of their garments from.

There was a time that factories such as Kisumu Cotton Mills (Kicomi), Rivatex, Raymond Woollen Mills, and Thika Cotton Mills relied on our cotton. We can still do it.

We have seen the return of Rivatex, the textile factory based in Eldoret, and President Kenyatta has now popularised their colourful shirts as he leads the Made in Kenya initiative. But Rivatex is only a fraction, a good story, of what should be done going forward. At the county level, you need to appreciate what Governor Charity Ngilu is doing with locally made garments through the Kitui County Textile Centre.

Kicomi founder
When the first textile mill was opened in Kisumu in 1965, the idea was to support the regional farmers with a cash crop with high demand. That is how the Khatau Group from India, regarded as one of the oldest business conglomerates in Asia, was invited by Jomo Kenyatta to start an industry in Kenya and he laid the foundation stone for the plant on July 28, 1964.

Kisumu’s modern-day Pamba Road was named Dharamsey Khatau Road in honour of Kicomi’s founder – while the road leading to the plant is known as Kicomi Road; an indicator of how the textile industry drove fortunes in the lake city.

Then in 1969, we saw the arrival in Eldoret of Raymond Woollen Mills, which at one point was Kenya’s largest textile complex. Though not a cotton complex, per se, Raymonds was then processing wool, making synthetic suits, blankets and ready to wear garments. Its blankets were so popular and were a constant reminder of Made in Kenya products.

Raymond was followed in Eldoret with Rift Valley Textile Mills (Rivatex), which was a joint venture between the government and European multinationals. But Rivatex soon became a case study of corruption as obsolete equipment was purchased and installed.

Again, the quality of garments for local markets was inferior to those destined to international market, yet they were demanding protection from international competitors.

Before independence, cotton farming was practised by large-scale colonial farmers and but the Jomo Kenyatta government encouraged locals to grow the crop and supported the purchase of ginneries through cooperatives.

That is how the first decade after independence saw the cotton sector grow while the government adopted policies that supported the growth of the industry by, among others, controlling marketing and fixing farm-gate cotton prices.

It also increased its investment in textile mills and saw to the expansion of land under cotton by sending extension services to the farms.

County governments, in cotton growing areas, have not taken advantage of the devolved function by streamlining this crop in their counties. Why? Nobody knows.

We have had many opportunities under the African Growth and Opportunities Act (Agoa) where Kenyan textiles could enter the US market. In the US, cotton is taken seriously because it was the foundation of the country’s economy.

What is required is a regulatory framework to support the industry. When the Cotton Board collapsed in 1991, the regulation, licensing and control of the ginneries was left with no institution to control it and farmers were abandoned with a crop that had turned to be the source of their poverty.

More so, the quality control of seeds vanished and farmers were left to import uncertified seeds from Uganda and when these failed, they were left with grazing fields.

Ginneries auctioned
There were various cotton ginneries across the country, which were run by these farmers under cooperatives but they were either auctioned by the banks, and Cooperative Bank led from the front, or simply collapsed and were left to rot.

After some private entities took over the farmers’ ginneries, and sold some as scrap metal, the Cotton Board was left with no role.

An institutional vacuum had, thus, been created. But, interestingly, the Cotton Lint and Seed Marketing Board was retained in the statutes, even though there was nothing on the ground and its officers continued to get salaries and board members a sitting allowance. Talk of heist.

Liberalisation caught many of the firms unawares and shortly after 1990, most of the firms in Nairobi, Mombasa, Nanyuki and Kisumu collapsed as imports replaced locally manufactured products. Those that remained started importing wool and cotton and forgot about the farmers; after the liberalisation policy which was hailed by International Monetary Fund as the panacea to our problems was pushed into us.

Soon, secondhand clothes flooded our markets at a time when the industry was starting to face a slow death. It was hoped that after the liberalisation of the sector, the new ginneries owners would support the growth of the sector and buy cotton from local farmers. But the private investors were not interested. The high-yielding seeds vanished and farmers were left with cotton that had no buyer.

How much would Tana River County gain from cotton farming? We had a huge cotton irrigation project there and in Baringo. But all these lands are being wasted. Previous whistle-start, whistle-stop formulas have not helped either. Today, cotton is under the Fibre Crops Directorate which is neither here nor there.

Once upon a time, the textile and clothing industry was the second largest employer after the civil service. In 2003, shortly after Mwai Kibaki came to power, the government while nominating various personalities for the boards of parastatals forgot that Cotton Lint and Seed Marketing Board existed. That is how far we had gone down.

Recently, the mitumba traders made interesting proposals: to be allowed to grow cotton and start their own ginneries to phase off the importation of second-hand clothes. It can be done, but only if the governors are not wasting time digging for war rather than helping the agriculture sector grow.

[email protected] @johnkamau1
Upus long thread the person who wrote that report didn't go to the ground to do that research rather based on baseless facts.Busia wapi utapata acreage ya cotton planting?
 
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