Summary
- Kenyan farmers are set to lose up to Sh51 billion from the decline in exports in four months of Corona restrictions, experts have predicted, worsening earnings outlook of key agricultural commodities.
- Bernard Kiarie, chief executive at the African Alliance Kenya said agricultural exports (horticulture, tea and coffee) which were collectively earning Sh21.4 billion monthly last year are currently down to about 40 percent.
Kenyan farmers are set to lose up to Sh51 billion from the
decline in exports in four months of Corona restrictions, experts have
predicted, worsening earnings outlook of key agricultural commodities.
Bernard
Kiarie, chief executive at the African Alliance Kenya said agricultural
exports (horticulture, tea and coffee) which were collectively earning
Sh21.4 billion monthly last year are currently down to about 40 percent.
That translates to an annualised loss of Sh150 billion.
“The
situation will be dire in 2020 in case of an underwhelming production.
This will result in the need for additional resources from the central
government at a time when competing needs are on the rise,” Mr Kiarie
said.
Low demand in the European market had already
pushed the flower industry to the edge from as early as late 2019 with
Finlay’s signalling closure of its two farms employing about 1,000
workers, Karuturi laying off more than 3,000 workers while Oserian Farm
was to fire 400 staff.
At the moment, freight costs
have shot up over the Covid-19 period to levels between Sh450 and Sh700
per kilogramme from Sh130 to 330/kg in January.
“Although we have seen a slight pick-up in demand for
horticulture in the European market, of 3,500 tonnes per week from lows
of 1,300 due to the pandemic, emerging issues that include increase in
freight costs and insufficient cargo capacity will be
counterproductive,” Mr Kiarie said.
According to
Okisegere Ojepat, the chief executive of Fresh Produce Consortium of
Kenya, cargo carried in the bellies of passenger flights accounts for
about 40 percent of cargo exports.
However, for the
remaining 60 percent airlifted via cargo freights, where flights would
carry an average of 1,400 tonnes, the volume had shrunk to about 360
tonnes a week.
The various flower auctions in Europe,
which have since closed down in Covid-19 containment measures, cancelled
orders, cutting Kenya’s exports.
In a note to
investors, the African Alliance warned that the impact of Covid-19 could
have serious implications on forex earnings from agriculture due to low
demand in the above key destinations and production disruptions locally
due to transportation challenges.
Agriculture is also
at risk by ravages of locusts and floods that have wreaked havoc across
the country. The earnings from the main agricultural exports stood at
Sh256.8bn in 2019.
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