By Erick Wanjala
Agriculture and Livestock Development Cabinet Secretary Sen. Mutahi Kagwe has drawn a sharp line on the future of Kenya’s dairy industry, declaring that milk exports will only thrive if farmers and feed manufacturers eliminate aflatoxin contamination and embrace a quality-based payment scheme.
Speaking at the official opening of the 17th African Dairy Conference and Exhibition (AFDA17) at the Kenyatta International Convention Centre, Kagwe warned that contaminated feeds are directly undermining Kenya’s export ambitions.
“No export without quality. Aflatoxin in maize feeds passes straight into milk and locks us out of lucrative markets. If we are serious about doubling production and exporting, we must fix feed quality first,” he said.
The CS announced that the Government will soon launch a Good Quality Milk certification programme, which will set clear benchmarks for hygiene and safety. Farmers delivering high-quality milk will earn premium payments, while those supplying substandard produce will no longer be paid the same.
“We must all produce good quality milk, and the farmer must be recognised for doing the right thing. It cannot be the same amount for bad and good. Those who produce better will earn better,” Kagwe stressed.
To address the aflatoxin threat, Kagwe urged feed manufacturers and farmers to adopt Aflasafe, a proven biological product that suppresses aflatoxin in maize. He sent a direct message to the feed industry:
“Use aflatoxin-free maize. Adopt Aflasafe. This is the only way to guarantee the best milk for Kenyans and protect our place in global markets.”
Kenya produced 5.3 billion litres of milk in 2024, but under the Bottom-Up Economic Transformation Agenda the Government aims to double output to 10 billion litres within the next few years. Achieving this, Kagwe said, will require tackling aflatoxin, reducing feed costs, improving cattle breeds, and incentivising farmers for quality.
Kagwe also challenged African nations to exchange best practices and harmonise standards under AfCFTA, saying Africa cannot continue importing milk powders while sitting on vast potential.
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