Officials say the move marks a deliberate shift away from reliance on rain-fed farming, which continues to expose millions of farmers to erratic weather patterns.
“Whenever rains fail, it affects the farmers greatly, and those are some of the effects of climate change,” said State Department for Irrigation Principal Secretary Ephantus Kimotho.
“Irrigation comes in as a mitigating factor. Whenever there is rain, we store water, and when there is drought, we use that water to do irrigation”.Kimotho said the government has already identified close to two million acres nationwide for irrigation development, particularly in regions historically sidelined by low and unreliable rainfall.
He noted that irrigation is no longer being treated as a backup plan but as a central pillar of agricultural production.
“This is a year that we will actually see more farmers reaping the benefits of irrigation,” he said, pointing to ongoing rehabilitation and expansion of irrigation schemes across the country.The dam construction programme is expected to kick off in 2026. According to the Head of Irrigation Infrastructure, Engineer Vincent Kabuti, at least six “game-changing” dams are lined up, pending completion of designs, feasibility studies and financing.
“We are confident that in 2026 we are going to start construction of at least six large-scale dams,” Kabuti said.
“This will open the door to commercial agriculture, which will go a long way in meeting our food security needs as a country, create jobs and transform livelihoods”.The dams will primarily serve irrigation schemes in arid and semi-arid counties, where large tracts of land remain underutilised.
Irrigation Secretary for Programmes Michael Thuita said these regions offer the greatest opportunity for scaling up irrigated farming.
“We are geared towards increasing the area under irrigation by promoting large dams in ASAL areas such as Mandera and the wider North Eastern region, Baringo, Turkana and the Galana area,” Thuita said.
“These regions have land, sunlight and labour, but lack reliable water infrastructure”.

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