The reason why horticulture does well is because its ran as a business and also note that government has very little to do with it. Its no surprise the only agriculture sector that's thriving government isn't involved. 2016 earnings were up 12%, 2017 we're in May. And if direct flights to America come to fruition, that's another potential huge market. Farmers with the help of county government now that agriculture is devolved can be trained to use modern techniques. Take dairy farming, I was shocked to find out that in some counties farmers don't use artificial insemination. In those counties raw milk price average ksh.80 per litre.
Geothermal there's plenty of wells that have be drilled its only that companies which are suppose to produce electricity have not started. Maybe the reason is power generation is liberalized but transmission and distribution are not.
We can play the political angle for ever with me placing the blame on Jubilee and you avoiding blaming anybody.
The bottom line when it comes to milk:
There was enough milk before Mzungu came. He faced such competition that itv was the official government policy to destock Kamba and Maasai herds so that Mzungu could compete! So much for capitalism. That nonsense is still going on.
How does one return cattle to Kamba land as before? The trick lies in repairing the damage done to make it inhospitable for cattle. One can sue the British government and get compensation and use some to reforest and buy land and set out for communal grazing. That has no worked very well.
The key to milk production is not zero grazing. It lies in strengthening and modernizing the people who are already keeping hundreds of thousands of cattle but with very little milk to show for it!
Learn from how Sweden, Norway and Finland have helped the Sami to modernize Reindeer rearing in to a multimillion dollar industry.
The cows kept by Pundit at home in Litein are just pets which he should be encouraged to keep and even give names. But the country whose population will double in less than 50 years cannot depend on pets for milk. We need large scale call it it industrial, farms but grounded in the culture of the people. A guy who owns 1000 cows in Pokot given aid and provided security and infrastructure can easily supply Uhuru's Brookside needs for a month with one day's milk production.
I have seen the Fulani change their habits and get into milk production. It is not easy but it can work.
I was in Pokot recently and saw rivers (not big but rivers all the same). Yet there was drought. I know of a pump which can be run by a tractor and can sprinkle water from any river to a radius of 6 kilometers. I am told the one I saw was one of the smallest. That to me is like rain.
What we are lacking is the commitment to solve problems. The overriding desire is to get projects to "eat from"