Visitors tour a flower farm in Njoro, Nakuru, last year. The EU set
stringent health benchmarks for fruit, vegetable and flower exports from
Kenya. FILE
By SARAH OOKO, sooko@ke.nationmedia.com
In Summary
- Kenya Plant Health Inspectorate Service (Kephis) said findings from the survey being done by the International Centre of Insect Physiology and Ecology (ICIPE) would be ready in a year.
- The agency hopes to use the data to counter assertions from the EU that fresh produce from Kenya has high chemical residue level
A standards agency has started gathering data on chemical residues on fresh produce in a bid to ease farmers’ access to the crucial European Union market.
Kenya Plant Health Inspectorate Service (Kephis)
said findings from the survey being done by the International Centre of
Insect Physiology and Ecology (ICIPE) would be ready in a year.
Kephis hopes to use the data to counter assertions
from the EU that fresh produce from Kenya has high chemical residue
levels, a perception that forced the bloc to set stringent health
benchmarks for fruit, vegetable and flower exports.
“After that, we expect to minimise the pesticide
residue limit in our crops by over 60 per cent and comfortably meet EU
targets,” Kephis managing director James Onsando said.
He was speaking during the opening of a five-day
EU training workshop on plant health and protection products in Nairobi
on Monday.
Early last year, beans and peas destined for
Europe were rejected at entry points after they were found to
have residue levels of a pesticide known as Dimethoate above the EU
limit of 0.02 parts per million.
Dr Onsando said EU set the low residue limit
because Kenya did not have data on levels of Dimethoate pesticide used
in horticulture to kill pests like aphids and mites.
“Our farmers hadn’t done anything wrong. The
challenge arose as a result of EU drastically changing its regulation
and reducing acceptable limits of the pesticide tenfold from the
previous 0.2 parts per million. This caught many people off guard,” said
Dr Onsando.
He said that manufacturers of pesticide were
reluctant to conduct tests and give the information to farmers and
regulators because the costs involved would make the chemicals more
expensive.
Health hazards
“Companies manufacturing pesticides for commercial
crops like maize and coffee can afford to do so as these plants are
grown on large scale and by very many farmers. So they generate more
income from their sales,” Dr Onsando said.
European Union Delegation head Lodewijk Briet said
the standards were aimed at protecting European countries from harmful
organisms that may pose health hazards to consumers.
The EU is Kenya’s main market for fresh produce exports, taking up 23 per cent or Sh90 billion in 2012.
Exports of fresh horticultural products increased
by 18.5 per cent from 247,847 tonnes in the year to September 2012 to
293,631 tonnes in the year to September 2013, according to the Central
Bank of Kenya monthly economic review report for October. The study did
not assign any value to the exports.
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