Milk processor rallies farmers to conserve animal feed amid climate change

Business
By Esther Dianah | Feb 21, 2024
A dairy farmer in Embu County. [Nanjinia Wamuswa, Standard]

Brookside Dairy has rolled out a plan to promote animal feed conservation for optimum milk volumes across all seasons.

The processor is rallying dairy farmers to prepare and conserve animal feed as a mitigation to challenges brought about by climate change.

Brookside, which partners with over 160,000 dairy farmers across the country, yesterday began awarding winners of a recent silage-making competition. Winners were picked from those who stored the largest tonnage of silage and of the highest quality.

“Animal feed is an integral part of milk production costs, thus when conserved and utilized at the right time the farmer benefits immensely through sustained production leading to reduced costs at the farm level. We will be working with both individual farmers and groups to raise the bar in terms of silage quality,” said Brookside General Manager in charge of milk procurement Emmanuel Kabaki in Sirikwa, Uasin Gishu county.

Last year, the processor organised a silage-making competition to increase the uptake of adoptable technology to conserve various forage species.

“Forage requirement in the country has been growing due to the vibrant nature of the local dairy sector.  However, there has been over-reliance on rain-fed agriculture, which is cyclic, with unreliable rains experienced year after year thus impacting milk production,” Mr Kabaki said.

Silage is a conserved fodder from preferred species of crops or grass that can be fed to cows during the dry season when pasture cover is reduced.

Forages like napier, maize and sorghum can be incorporated with other materials to ="https://www.standardmedia.co.ke/farmkenya/article/2001324921/what-i-feed-my-dairy-cows-to-get-450-litres-of-milk">improve quality< during the preparation of animal feed.

Mr Kabaki challenged dairy farmers to invest in quality feed, saying it is key to having a healthy herd capable of producing milk all year round.

“The productivity of your livestock is only as good as what you feed them on. One of the most common problems that farmers face is lack of balanced nutrition, resulting in an unproductive herd,” he said. According to the Kenya Agricultural and Livestock Research Organisation (Kalro), smallholder dairy farmers in Kenya mainly depend on rain-fed forage, with feed being plenty during the rainy season and scarce during the dry season.

“Dairy productivity is therefore low in the dry season mainly due to inadequate and low-quality forage,” Kalro says in its training manual for silage making for smallholder farmers.

Share this story
Regulation of fintech needs to promote stability, innovation
Fintech innovation, particularly mobile-based, has transformed access to financial services across the region with mobile wallets becoming a lifeline for the unbanked.
Why Kenya-Germany jobs deal is double-edged sword for workers
Up to 250,000 Kenyans could move to the country after a pilot project is launched, raising public concerns among Germans who express skepticism and hostility toward incoming Kenyans
Safaricom consortium gets Sh104b contract for digital health system
The three firms will invest in the project and recover the investment over a 10-year period starting February 2025, delivering 70,000 tablets and 5,000 laptops to public health workers.
Kenya's nuclear electricity plan faces cost, environment hurdles
Nuclear plants could cost hundreds of billions, while the distribution network is dilapidated. The growing population and expanding middle class have led to increased electricity demand.
Experts call on farmers to grow drought resilient crops
Farmers need to embrace irrigation and growing resilient crops such as cassava, sweet potato, finger millet, and sorghum, as part of climate-smart agriculture.
.
RECOMMENDED NEWS