Safaricom has partnered with Chinese tech giant Huawei to
develop sensors that will notify dairy farmers when it is ideal to
inseminate their cows in a bid to increase milk production.
Through
the device, which will be lodged in the cows’ bodies, farmers will be
able to track their animals’ menstrual cycles through a digital database
and schedule targeted insemination.
Huawei has
developed the devices while Safaricom will set up the business model for
their delivery to Kenyan farmers and provide the network through which
the devices will send data to them.
“We are also working with the Agriculture ministry. We have done
a lot of trials in Nakuru and Eldoret for the dairy cows,” said Huawei
Kenya chief executive Stone He, during Huawei-Reddington ICT Summit at
Movenpick Hotel on Wednesday.
“Kenya has more than four million dairy cows but the milk production is not so high.”
He said the device is instrumental in monitoring dairy cows, especially when their number is high.
“That
(device) will help the farmer because if you have 100 cows, it is very
challenging to know which cow should be inseminated,” Mr He said.
According
to data from the Livestock Research for Rural Development journal,
Kenya’s dairy sector contributes about 8 percent of Gross Domestic
Product (GDP) with an annual milk production of 3.43 billion litres.
Kenyan milk production is 3 percent of the 18 percent global production
stemming from sub-Saharan Africa. Dairy cattle population is estimated
at 4.3 million.
Mr He said wrong timing costs farmers
their income because they have to wait about 21 days before the cow is
fertile again, delaying milk production.
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