Flower production has fallen by over 20 per cent due to rains that have been pounding Naivasha and its environs.
According to one of the leading flower farms Van Den Berg, the drop has been due to the cold weather.
The farm located along the Moi South Lake Road has a workforce of 1,200 staff and produces over 600,000 roses daily.
According
to the farm managing director Johan Remeeus, growers are now feeling
the toll of the heavy rains, which have been pounding the lakeside town
for a couple of weeks.
“Flowers do well in warm
conditions, but due to the cold weather caused by the heavy rains we
have seen production fall by around 20 per cent,” he said.
On
the market, Mr Remeeus said for the last five years the price of roses
had remained constant against a rise in production cost.
He
noted that the once-lucrative Russian market is no longer performing
well due to its weak currency compared to the Euro, which flower farmers
trade in.
BIGGEST CHALLENGE
“The
cost of labour continues to be the biggest challenge in flower
production while flower marker in Europe is stable,” he said. Speaking
on the farm, the senior manager admitted that Ethiopia continues to be
Kenya’s largest competitor in the region due to subsidies offered by the
government. “We hoped that the just-ended World Trade Organisation
meeting would have addressed the issue of subsidies for fair playing
ground, but this was never to be,” he said.
Mr Remeeus
was, however, quick to note that the cost of electricity had come down
in the last two months as promised by the government.
The
farm’s human resource manager Mr George Onyango asked the national and
county governments to urgently address the issue of lease.
He
said this is causing anxiety among many farmers as the 999 lease had
expired with some counties threatening to take over the land.
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