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Nairobi Business Monthly
Home»Briefing»Kenya moves to fully digitize agriculture and livestock data
Briefing

Kenya moves to fully digitize agriculture and livestock data

Victor AdarBy Victor Adar28th November 2025No Comments3 Mins Read
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A Maasai elder tends to his cattle. (Photo: Courtesy)
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It is a new era for farmers as the Ministry of Agriculture and Livestock Development is all set to digitize agriculture and livestock data thanks to the Kenya Integrated Agriculture Management Information System (KIAMIS) — marking one of the biggest digital milestones in Kenya’s agricultural transformation journey.

The Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO) and development partners on Friday, November 28, during the ongoing Intergovernmental Forum on Agriculture in Naivasha, officially handed over KIAMIS to Agriculture and Livestock Development Cabinet Secretary Sen. Mutahi Kagwe.

Hamisi William, FAO Deputy Country Representative, who presented the system to the CS revealed that FAO is also working closely with the Ministry of Lands, noting that the two digital technologies will be fully integrated to strengthen planning, farmer verification, credit access, and digital extension.

The Nairobi Law Monthly September Edition

“Every village in Kenya and every farmer will now be connected to the digital super highway,” CS Kagwe said, describing the move as a “new dawn for Kenyan farmers” and a key plank of President Ruto’s Digital Super Highway agenda.

“This is critical for delivering subsidized farm inputs, soil health information, and tailored agronomic advisories directly to farmers’ phones,” he added.

KIAMIS currently hosts over 7.1 million registered farmers across crops and livestock will be domiciled at the newly transformed Kenya Agriculture Data and Information Centre (KADIC), formerly AIRC, positioning KADIC as the country’s central hub for agriculture intelligence.

This comes at a moment when KADIC is also taking on a second national system: Animal Identification and Traceability System (ANITRAC). Rarely to African countries rely on verifiable food systems. But with KIAMIS and ANITRAC now consolidated under KADIC, Kenya becomes one of the few African countries with an integrated national digital agriculture and traceability architecture — unlocking data-driven farming, efficient service delivery, export readiness, and farmer verification at scale.

“Today’s consumer wants traceability — 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,” Livestock Principal Secretary Jonathan Mueke, said.

The PS noted that ANITRAC, for example, is already revolutionising Kenya’s livestock value chain and placing the country on a competitive footing in global premium markets.

“We have completed the development of ANITRAC, Kenya’s new livestock traceability system. This is not just a platform; it is a policy instrument that anchors transparency, food safety, and market confidence,” he said.

The impact, he noted, is already visible:

“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.”

PS Mueke also assured international buyers of the system’s integrity:

“Whatever is keyed into ANITRAC cannot be manipulated. Importers can now verify every detail in real time — guaranteeing that the meat they buy from Kenya meets the highest global food-safety standards.”

He added that vaccination records — a key compliance requirement for export markets — are now fully captured:

“Vaccination is central to export compliance. Through ANITRAC, all vaccine records, farm practices, and movement permits are captured in one matrix that international buyers can authenticate instantly.”

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Victor Adar
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Victor Adar is a seasoned journalist with a Diploma in Mass Communication (Print) from the Technical University of Mombasa. He has previously worked with Reuters, Go Places travel magazine, and Aden Associates International. Since joining NBM in 2012, he has become a key member of the editorial team, covering enterprise, corporate affairs, HR, and technology.

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The Nairobi Law Monthly September Edition
Latest Posts

Kenya moves to fully digitize agriculture and livestock data

28th November 2025

Inuka Enterprise’s Sh100,000 grant to boost small businesses

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28th November 2025

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