by James Karuga
Rose Wanjiku draws rainwater she harvested from a water tank in Ngurubani in Central Kenya province. THOMSON REUTERS FOUNDATION/James Karuga |
NGURUBANI,
Kenya (Thomson Reuters Foundation) – When Rose Wanjiku first moved to
her home in Central Kenya province 14 years ago, the region received
four months of rain every year. The rains began in April and again in
October, and were sufficient for a small-scale farmer such as herself to
grow staples like maize and beans to feed her family and sell the
surplus at local markets.
Today the Ngurubani area gets only two months of rain a
year. Because of the growing scarcity, Wanjiku has resorted to
irrigating her crops with water pumped from the Thiba River when rains
fail in mid-season. Even though the river is just a stone’s throw away
from her house and fields, the water pump means extra expenses for her
household.
“Farming has become very expensive for us these days. We
hardly make profits,” said her husband Munene. His wife added that the
river water cannot be used for household purposes because it is too
muddy.
To counter the water shortages, Wanjiku, 45, has begun
harvesting rainwater. Her roof is fitted with gutters and through a loan
from SMEP, a Kenyan microfinance programme, she has bought a 2,300-litre (600-gallon) water tank to store the harvested water.
Rainwater gathered since April has been sustaining her household until the rains are due to begin again next month.
Wanjiku began making loan payments of 1,000 Kenyan shillings
(around $11) a month in February, and aims to clear the loan by
November.
The frustrations of poor rainfall also have taken a toll on
Margaret Njeri Muthee, 38, another farmer and secretary of the 12-member
Wendani Women’s Group, which also counts Wanjiku as a member.
Njeri recalls that when she first moved to Ngurubani 15
years ago, rains were regular and she was able to harvest up to two 90kg
bags of beans per acre of land. Today she gets half a bag of beans at
most.
“The weather has really changed here – there is a chill I
never saw before, destroying our staples,” Njeri said. Because of the
unpredictable weather and poor crop yields, Njeri now rears pigs, in
addition to chickens and cattle.
“I’m tired of farming maize and beans,” she added.
As a result of increasingly short rainfall, Njeri was
spending 400 shillings (nearly $5) every week to pay for a donkey-drawn
cart to fetch water from the Thiba River, over a kilometre away from her
home. But now she, too, has a water tank, bought on credit from SMEP.
Njeri and Wanjiku are among over 7,000 Kenyan recipients of an ongoing water credit scheme
accessed through microfinance institutions such as SMEP. The scheme
enables households to buy tanks to capture and store clean rainwater
that runs from rooftops along the gutters.
WIDESPREAD WATER STRESS
UNESCO reports that 17 million of Kenya’s 41 million inhabitants lack access to safe water.
Of the loan recipients, 92 percent are women. According to Patrick Alubbe, East Africa regional director of Water.Org,
a nongovernmental organisation, it is the women in households who must
spend hours searching for water, and this makes them appreciate the
scheme, as it saves them time.
SMEP has given 821 water-related loans so far, with
repayment rates of more than 90 percent, according to Fridah Njeru,
SMEP’s senior programmes coordinator.
Kenya has 29,000 beneficiaries of water-related loans
countrywide, with some funds going to building latrines or fix sewer
systems to improve sanitation. The scheme also operates in Uganda,
Bangladesh and India.
With a tank to harvest rainwater, Wanjiku says she no longer
needs to wait for mud in collected river water to settle at the bottom
of her containers so that she can use it at home.
Kenya’s average annual rainfall is 630 mm, which qualities it as a water-scarce country, according to a study published by the U.N. Food and Agriculture Organization. However, a study by
the Southern and Eastern Africa Rainwater Network notes that large
groundwater aquifers represents a valuable water resource not directly
related to or dependent on rainfall patterns.
Experts are pointing to aquifers as the country’s next important source of water. This comes following the recent discovery of aquifers in the drought-hit Turkana region in Kenya’s north, where rainfall does not exceed 450mm annually.
The aquifers are reported to hold 250 billion cubic metres –
enough to supply Kenya’s needs for 70 years at the current rate of
consumption of 3 billion cubic metres a year.
James Karuga is a Nairobi-based journalist interested in agriculture and climate change issues
Rainwater harvesting is the accumulation and deposition of rainwater for reuse before it reaches the aquifer. Rain water harvest provides ideal solution in places where the ground water level is low or there is inadequate surface resources to trap the ground water. Nice post.
ReplyDeleteAlso Stormsaver donated money to get this rainwater harvesting project off the ground through our contact with TK Says who works with projects in Kenya. If you want to find out more for your blog let us know! Can we tweet a link to your blog and put on our site?
ReplyDeleteSure Lisa, please do! Thank you in advance.
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