New dawn for over 7 million farmers as Gov't launches digital agriculture system
FAO Assistant Country Rep. Hamisi Williams handing over KIAMIS to Agriculture CS Mutahi Kagwe, Livestock PS Jonathan Mueke and KADIC Director Betty Cheroigin and Juma Salim. PHOTO | COURTESY
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Over 7 million farmers are set to benefit from a pivotal
digital transformation in the agriculture sector after the Food and Agriculture
Organization (FAO) of the United Nations and development partners have handed
over the Kenya Integrated Agriculture Management Information System (KIAMIS) to
the Ministry of Agriculture.
The handover witnessed during the ongoing
Intergovernmental Forum on Agriculture in Naivasha was led by FAO Deputy
Country Representative Hamisi William who presented the system to Agriculture
Cabinet Secretary Mutahi Kagwe, marking one of the biggest digital milestones
in Kenya’s agricultural transformation.
KIAMIS, which now hosts 7.1 million
registered farmers across crops and livestock will be domiciled at the newly
transformed Kenya Agricultural Digital Information Centre (KADIC), creating a
“one stop shop” for agricultural data and information.
CS Kagwe described the handover as a “new
dawn for Kenyan farmers” and a key plank of the government's Digital Super
Highway agenda.
“Every village in Kenya and every farmer will
now be connected to the digital super highway,” said CS Kagwe.
“This is critical for delivering subsidized
farm inputs, soil health information, and tailored agronomic advisories
directly to farmers’ phones.”
The milestone comes at a transformative
moment for KADIC as the ministry also makes significant gains with the Animal
Identification and Traceability (ANITRAC) launched in May 2025.
ANITRAC was designed to create a centralised
and reliable source for animal identification, registration, traceability, and
tracking.
Livestock Principal Secretary Jonathan Mueke
said that ANITRAC is already revolutionising Kenya’s livestock value chain and
placing the country on a competitive footing in global premium markets.
“Today’s consumer wants traceability from
farm to fork. If we are going to compete in premium global markets, we must
demonstrate that our farmers meet every export requirement with absolute
integrity," he said.
“Since we rolled out the ANITRAC policy,
Kenya’s meat exports have grown by 45%. That is the clearest sign that
structured traceability opens doors to high-value markets.”
ANITRAC seeks to link international buyers
with farmers, detailing vaccination records, real-time data on animal movement
and health status.
With KIAMIS and ANITRAC now consolidated
under KADIC, Kenya becomes one of the few African countries with an integrated
national digital agriculture and traceability.


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