newsKenya Launches Electronic Platform to Boost Food Security

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13 Jan

Kenya Launches Electronic Platform to Boost Food Security

Nairobi – Kenya launched on Thursday an electronic platform that will boost food security in the country.

Peter Munya, cabinet secretary in the Ministry of Agriculture, Livestock, Fisheries and Cooperatives said that the Warehouse Receipt System (WRS) will enable farmers and agricultural commodity traders to store their produce in exchange for a warehouse receipt (WR) which can be traded, sold, exchanged or used to source credit and inputs.

“The use of a warehouse receipt system is expected to cut down on post-harvest losses from 40 percent to 10 percent,” Munya said in a statement released in Nairobi.

The WRS enables farmers to deposit storable goods, usually grains or coffee, in exchange for a WR.

A warehouse receipt is a document issued by warehouse operators as evidence that specified commodities of stated quantity and quality have been deposited at a particular location.

“The use of a WRS will deepen food security in the country and ensure adequate nutrition in line with the government’s national development blueprint”, Munya said.

“This has seen farmers get low prices for their agricultural commodities, making agriculture unfavorable to many,” he added.

Hamadi Boga, principal secretary in the State Department for Crops Development and Agricultural Research, said that the warehouse receipt gives more power to farmers as they can additionally use it as collateral to access credit from financial institutions.

According to government data, the agricultural sector contributes to about 33% of the economy and employs about 40% of the population.

Boga revealed that mainstreaming agricultural trading through the WRS will be impactful to reducing overall poverty.

“It will subsequently reduce price volatility and improve liquidity when farmers make use of it as the first step towards commodity exchange,” he added.

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