Mr Hassan Warsame, the chairman of Nuug Camel Milk Products, Wajir Woman
Representative Fatuma Gedi, Kamukunji MP Yusuf Hassan, former Isiolo
deputy governor Guled Simba and Mandera North MP Sheikh Bashir. PHOTO |
RICHARD MUNGUTI
New camel milk products have been introduced in the market and could come into serious rivalry with other dairy products.
Nuug
Camel Milk Products Limited has joined the ranks of firms packaging the
milk products in large quantities. The company — situated along
Enterprise Road in Industrial Area, Nairobi — is producing the products
in several flavours including Vanilla, Strawberry and Mango.
The launch of the milk products was done when country marked the World Camel Day, which is celebrated on June 22.
In
Kenya, the World Camel Day celebrations were held at Khulan Foods
Company within the Central Business District (CBD) and attended by some
lawmakers from northern Kenya, a university researcher Prof George
Gitau, veterinarian Dr Kenneth Wameyo, Ewaso Nyiro North Development
Authority director in Samburu County Robert Lemerketo and Kenya Camels
Association (KCA) national co-ordinator Khalif A Abey.
KCA was started in 1997 but experienced teething problems after succession politics took centrestage.
“KCA had to go through revitalisation and rejuvenation,” Mr Abey stated.
Mr
Abey disclosed that yearly turnover of camel milk sales under KCA has
surpassed Sh10 billion per annum and is produced by 3.3 million camels
being grazed in various parts of the country.
The figure of 3.3 million camels is the latest based on the Kenya National Bureau of Statistics.
“Milk alone earned Sh10 billion from the sale of 340-500 million litres, which is produced formally and informaly,” he said.
Only 15 percent of this milk reaches the market due to the hygene issue alone.
He
said KCA established first milk factory in Nanyuki in 2008 after the
government began to recognise the camel as a food animal as initially it
had been classified as wildlife.
The factory was targeting the pastoral community in Isiolo, Marsabit, Samburu and Laikipia counties.
KCA later moved to Garissa and established another factory handling over 2,000 to 3,000 litres a day.
“In Garissa, the camel milk supports the livelihood of a vast majority with women handling the commodity,” Mr Abey stated.
Initially
camels were associated with northern Kenya but other communities have
begun to try their hand in herding this domestic animal known as the
“desert animal.”
Mr Abey said camel milk and meat
products are popular amongst the Somalis but other communities in town
centres have started consuming the delicacy.
“Camel
milk products are now being packaged like other dairy products in the
market now,” Mr Abey told guests at the event marking the World Camel
Day. The fete wasattended by Members of Parliament from northern Kenya
at a city hotel.
He said presently 99.9 per cent of the
camel milk is marketed by women in Garissa, Mandera, Wajir and parts of
Laikipia, but Nuug Camel Milk Products Limited has started packaging
both fresh and fermented products.
Mr Abey said the KCA
will ensure proper standards in the camel milk and meat industry are
maintained so that they will compete effectively.
The
KCA is regulating the milk factories and will allow the women in
business to have power and voice of fixing the products prices.
The KCA has reviewed the milk and meat standards.
“Nuug
(a somali word which means to nurture) Camel Milk Products Ltd has
begun to package yoghurt in three flavours , Mango, Strawberry and
Vanilla,” Mr Abey revealed.
Dr Wameyo said researchers
have embarked on establishing camel milk’s curative value in diseases
like cancer, diabetes, high blood pressure, anthritis and respiratory
complications.
The Managing Director of Nuug Camel Milk
Products Limited, Mr Bashir Warsame, said the company’s milk plant has
started production.
Mr Warsame said Kenya has over 3.3 million camels and is ranked fifth in camel population world.
“Its milk and meat products will compete with others like Brookside, Kenya Co-operative Creameries and other leading companies.”
“The
camel products are a space to watch as they will scale up the ladder of
exports just like meat,coffee, pyrethrum and other agricultural
products to become a foreign exchange earner,” he said.
He
said plans are under way to package camel meat products, saying they
have higher nutritional value than red and white meat since — as a
desert animal it feeds on herbs.
He said currently the KCA has teamed up with institutions of higher learning to carry out indepth research on the products.
Mr
Abey said the KCA is working hand in hand with the University of
Nairobi and Kenya Medical Research Institute (Kemri) to develop a policy
paper which will be passed on to Parliament to be enacted as law to
regulate rearing, product processing and marketing.
No comments :
Post a Comment