Summary
- Milk and its related products registered the highest per capita consumption in Kenya last year, followed by maize, wheat and vegetables, giving a glimpse of the typical dinner table in households.
- A Food Balance Sheet (FBS) by the Kenya National Bureau of Statistics (KNBS) shows that milk and related products had a per capita consumption of 93.3 kilogrammes in 2018, followed by maize and maize products (69.5kg), wheat products (41.3kg) and vegetables at 32.6kg.
- The FBS calculates the average quantity of a given food commodity consumed by an individual annually.
- The biggest change in per capita consumption was however registered in bananas, with the KNBS data showing that each Kenyan ate 27.5kg of bananas in 2018 — an equivalent of 82.1 percent jump from the previous year.
Milk and its related products registered the highest per capita
consumption in Kenya last year, followed by maize, wheat and
vegetables, giving a glimpse of the typical dinner table in households.
A
Food Balance Sheet (FBS) by the Kenya National Bureau of Statistics
(KNBS) shows that milk and related products had a per capita consumption
of 93.3 kilogrammes in 2018, followed by maize and maize products
(69.5kg), wheat products (41.3kg) and vegetables at 32.6kg.
The FBS calculates the average quantity of a given food commodity consumed by an individual annually.
The
biggest change in per capita consumption was however registered in
bananas, with the KNBS data showing that each Kenyan ate 27.5kg of
bananas in 2018 — an equivalent of 82.1 percent jump from the previous
year.
The second highest percentage change in per
capita consumption was registered in tomatoes, with each Kenyan
consuming 8.5kg in 2018 — a 41.7 per cent climb from 2017.
The
high per capita consumption of milk and its related products coincided
with a growth in production. Milk output rose by 18.4 per cent from
535.7 million litres in 2017 to 634.3 million litres last year, leading
to increase in the availability of the commodity that provides proteins.
Other
milk products, including cream, ghee, butter and cheese also recorded a
rise in processing as farmers and dairy co-operative societies turned
attention to milk value addition.
Production of butter and ghee rose by 10 per cent to 1,249.4
million litres of milk processed last year which was the highest of all
milk products.
Cheese output rose by 15 per cent to
390.7 million litres while cream production increased by 10 per cent to
454.1 million litres of milk processed at the back of increased milk
production and a market demand for milk products.
Milk
consumption has continued to grow in the last two years following
efforts by county governments and private sector to provide the
commodity to school-going children to boost their nutrition.
Some
of the counties currently giving free milk to nursery school pupils are
Nairobi, Mombasa, Migori, Murang’a and Embu. The programme aimsto boost
nutrition amongst pupils from poor families struggling to get decent
meals.
Dairy co-operative societies have also turned
attention to milk value addition, with fresh milk and premium yoghurt
brands being the main products. This has increased the farmers’ income
while boosting nutrition.
Some of the milk processors
include Ol Kalou-based Countryside Dairies, Mukurweini Farmers, Kiambaa
Farmers, Githunguri Dairy, Limuru Dairy, Sameer Dairy and Bio-foods,
among others. The sharp increase in per capita consumption of bananas
came at time when maize flour prices had shot through the roof—an
indication that consumers may have sought an alternative food.
The
price of maize flour hit a historic high of Sh153 per two-kilogramme
packet in 2017, pushing the favourite meal out of the reach of most
households. This trend carried on until about April last year. The
increase in cost of maize had been attributed to a shortage of the
commodity in the country and a ravaging drought that hit the Rift Valley
maize belt pushing a 90-kg bag of maize to retail for Sh4,500 from
Sh3,800 in 2016.
Wheat remains the third most popular
consumed food commodity with 41.3 kilogrammes per capita eaten last
year, a 5.6 per cent rise from 39.1 kilogrammes per capita in 2017.
Tomatoes
are the third most consumed at 41.7 per cent while vegetables are
fourth at 32.6 kilos per capita, according to the data.
Consumption
of sweet potatoes mainly grown in the Central highlands dropped by 18
per cent from 2017 to 18 kilogrammes per capita last year, the highest
decline of all food commodities. Other foods whose consumption fell
include rice, beans, cassava and onions largely driven by a rise in
their prices from supermarket shelves and mama mbogas or small vegetable
vendors.
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