Reviewing the Impacts of COVID-19 Pandemic on the Kenyan Aquaculture Sector and Future Adaptive Strategies
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Publication Date
2022-12-15Author
Jonathan Munguti, Jacob O Iteba, Nicholas Outa, James G Kirimi, Daniel Mungai, Domitila Kyule, Kevin Obiero, Erick O Ogello
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Show full item recordAbstract/ Overview
For many Kenyans, the aquaculture business provides a vital source of food and work. However, information on
Kenya’s aquaculture sector’s resilience in the face of emerging global shocks such as the COVID-19 pandemic
requires additional examination. Prior to the epidemic, Kenya’s aquaculture industry had grown from a tiny
participant to a critical component of the country’s fish food system, with fish and fisheries products becoming
the most extensively traded food commodity in Kenyan market places. However, as indicated in the review, the
aquaculture value chain has not been scrutinised since the onset of COVID-19. Lockdowns enacted during the
pandemic had a significant influence on access to aquaculture inputs, fish commerce, and the socio-economic
livelihoods of stakeholders and players in Kenya’s aquaculture value chain. Thus, initial and long-term adaptive
strategies, particularly those implemented by governments, could help to the development of COVID-19 specific
and generic resilience to numerous shocks and stressors among stakeholders and players involved in the
country’s aquaculture industry. Some of the measures include a government incentive package to help the
fisheries and aquaculture sectors recover, improve farming operations, and gain market trust, as well as the
adoption of new methods to reduce labor intensity, such as intelligent sensors, camera systems, and automated or
remotely controlled monitoring/feeding strategies. Such strategies and policies can protect the sector from future
shocks triggered by pandemics and other unforeseen circumstances.