News

New KCC feels the heat over spilt milk

  Share Bookmark Print Email
Email this article to a friend

Submit Cancel
Rating
Milk farmers like these ones who recently delivered their produce to the New KCC, Eldoret depot are braced for hard times in the wake of the current glut. Photo/JARED NYATAYA

Milk farmers like these ones who recently delivered their produce to the New KCC, Eldoret depot are braced for hard times in the wake of the current glut. Photo/JARED NYATAYA  

By PETER NG’ETICH
Posted  Saturday, February 6  2010 at  18:00

In Summary

  • Farmers currently hit hard by glut fear firm could take industry back to the dogs

Farmers are up in arms over the decision by New Kenya Cooperative Creameries (New KCC) management to turn away milk suppliers due to a production glut.

The move has seen thousands of litres of the product go down the drain, literally.

Milk supply has in recent weeks outstripped the local processing capacity, causing farmers who had embraced dairy farming enthusiastically following the revival of the New KCC to suffer huge losses.

The situation has also led to a slide in the price of the commodity, dealing another blow to farmers.

Gilbert Onyancha, a farmer from Kimumu in Eldoret, who keeps eight zero-grazing animals, criticised creameries for poor planning and management which had eaten into profits. He said farmers had suffered for a long time due to low prices.

The New KCC has previously been viewed as one of the success stories of the Kibaki administration. In 2002, the country’s milk output stood at 2,811,950 litres daily with many farmers keeping off due to poor prices.

After New KCC’s revival, dairy farmers who had abandoned the trade resumed rearing dairy cows and, by 2007, milk production had reached 4,230,000 litres according to Kenya Dairy Board.

The price of a litre of milk rose from Sh8 to a high of Sh24 late last year before falling to Sh20 last week which is still considered by many farmers as a good price.

Share This Story
Share

New KCC enjoys 40 per cent market share while the other 60 per cent is shared out by other processors and hawkers.

During its revival stages, the once vibrant creamery carried out campaigns to increase milk production.

Last week, New KCC chairman Matu Wamae said they were receiving more milk than they could process.

“We never expected production of milk to increase to this level. We are now overwhelmed,” he said.

Mr Wamae attributed the increase to the El-Nino rains experienced in the country from October last year to the first two weeks of January.

New KCC, he said, has been receiving an average of 680,000 litres of milk per day up from 400,000 litres against a processing capacity of 550,000 litres a day.

“Every day we are getting an excess milk intake of 130,000 litres,” Mr Wamae said.

1 | 2 Next Page »

Add a comment (1 comments so far)

  1. Submitted by chekulo

    How does our government operate? Do our ministers have any idea what it means to plan ahead?. They have done the same thing with maize and when hunger strikes, we go crying before donors for assistance. Where is Ruto and his troops? They only come when they want votes. They pretend they feel your pain only when there is political mileage to be gained. After the deaths due to the last drought, I thought our leaders became wiser. Iam not surprised that they learned nothing.

    Posted  February 07, 2010 10:31 PM