Rio Fish Ltd reposted this
When intentional people come together, they cause real economic transformation. Yesterday, on my way from Migori County, I dropped by the Rio Fish Ltd establishment at Opapo Fish Market in Homa Bay County. The fish facility was part of the economic stimulus projects set up by former President Uhuru in 2018 across various parts of the country. Rio Fish Ltd, led by the very able and amazing Angela Juliana O. and Joram Kabach took up and established one of Kenya’s best emerging players in the fish value chain. Working with over 700 women fish farmers, Rio Fish is already re-engineering and changing the narrative for women fisherfolk, from victims of predatory fish trade behaviors, to empowered producers. I learnt that Rio Fish offtakes 3,000kgs of fish daily from the farmers and sells through their outlets spread across various parts of the country, including Nairobi. They work with the farmers through close monitoring to ensure quality output, which they harvest and take the market. The women farmers are assured of inputs and market offtake, translating into meaningful economic empowerment for them. What’s more interesting? At the facility, Rio Fish has two large fishponds, where they don’t breed fish, but hyacinth! Yes they breed hyacinth. The firm has installed a bio-digestor where they mix fish-waste from their processing facility and hyacinth, to generate biogas that runs the entire facility! What an irony after such concerted efforts to get rid of hyacinth from Lake Victoria, terming it a menace. Rio Fish is positioning as a crucial positive disruptor in Kenya’s fish value chain and the lake region blue economy as a whole. It is these kinds of initiatives that grow a country and create the much-needed jobs and economic growth. However, for this to be achieved, there ought to be sufficient, commensurate and progressive macroeconomic policies that support the growth and not designed to overtax innovative hardwork and impede growth. For example, after all the efforts put by industry to revive and rebuild Kenya’s aquaculture sector, the Kenya Government has recently enacted the Fisheries Management Development Act 2024, with Regulations stating that from January 2025, every hatchery will pay an annual fees of KES50,000 for inspection and every cagefarm will also pay an annual fees KES50,000 plus an additional 5% of monthly and annual sales revenue. If these levies take effect, the aquaculture Industry is dead! It is grossly disheartening that the Kenya government puts zero efforts to spur and support growth of sectors that create jobs, but are quick to draft and impose laws and policies and aim to impose punitive levies where they’ve not invested at all! This is completely unacceptable! Why punish innovative solutions that grow sectors and create jobs in a country that is crumbling at the weight of unemployment and poverty? Mercy Chepkirui, Mercy Corps AgriFin, John Macharia, Sheena Raikundalia, Mercy Kimalat, Victor Otieno Agolla.
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In the world of entrepreneurship, we often see a stark contrast between those in power and the hardworking individuals striving to make a living. Kenyans are known for their perseverance and creativity, yet they face betrayal from those meant to support them. Whether it's small-scale farmers or large-scale operations, the common thread is the corrupt alliance between leaders and agrochemical corporations. It’s such an irony that certain critical sectors that should be heavily supported at the National and county level through tax incentives and rebates are the very ones that are overburdened with a raft of taxes at every level. We cannot feed ourselves at this rate, leave alone to bring about a balance in the current trade deficits between our nation and its main trading partners. I share your passion Charles Warria , sadly, ours is a man-eat-man society, devoid of any moral fabric that weaves us together. The situation has only worsened under the current administration.
Charles Warria, It was an absolute pleasure meeting you! I genuinely enjoyed our conversation and could not help but be impressed by your insights. It is not every day you meet someone who leaves such a memorable impression. Thank you for highlighting our work at Rio Fish Ltd and the transformation we aim to bring to smallholder youth and women fish farmers. Empowering women and youth is at the heart of our mission. We share your concern about the newly enacted Fisheries Management Development Act 2024 and its accompanying regulations. Regulations are essential for structuring industries, but punitive levies threaten to stifle growth rather than foster it. A dialogue with stakeholders is urgently needed to ensure the policies are enabling rather than crippling. Focus should be on promoting innovation, growth, and sustainability—elements critical for building a thriving aquaculture industry. At Rio, we are committed to advancing Kenya’s blue economy through practical, impactful solutions, we need an ecosystem that supports and champions these efforts. Let us continue advocating for policies that drive growth and empower the people whose livelihoods depend on this industry. Thank you for standing with us in this critical journey.
This is extremely encouraging. That said, there is a lesson for stakeholders and it is that they must work hard to strengthen their sector associations and become active members of KAM, Chamber of Commerce and lastly be present when calls for public participation is made. We must be our own defenders and liberators.
Stakeholder effective engagement should proceed every change anticipated. Our government call to action
It was a pleasure meeting you Charles Warria , always welcome to RF
Generalist. Thought Leader. Lateral Thinker. Private Sector Development. Market Systems. Reader. Impact Champion. Sustainable Development. Humanist. Board Member. Systems Thinker. Writer. Change Agent.
1wHyacinth and fish waste = Biogas