KEBS withdraws 5,840 bags of substandard fertiliser from Kenyan market
The
Kenya Bureau of Standards (KEBS) has been forced to seize 5,840 bags of
substandard fertiliser from the market.
This
comes amid fears from farmers that they are being sold substandard fertiliser
even as they toil to till their land and harvest from their sweat.
On
Tuesday, farmers from Kakamega County lamented about being sold fertiliser that
consisted more of stones than solvable matter.
According
to KEBS Managing Director Esther Ngari, tests done on BL-GPC Original
fertiliser manufactured by SBL Innovate Limited showed that it was substandard
and therefore not fit to be in sold in the country.
Speaking
when she appeared before Agriculture committee of the National Assembly on
Wednesday, Ms. Ngari said the company had initially applied and been granted a
permit to supply the fertiliser in January 2023, but the fertiliser that was
tested this year was not the one being sold at the National Cereals and Produce
Board (NCPB) warehouses.
“The
product which KEBS initially certified is different from what has been seized
from various NCPB depots in the country and condemned as substandard and
counterfeit and thus not suitable for sale in the market,” she said.
She
told the MP John Mutunga-led committee that out of the 59 samples they took and
tested, the fertiliser failed the test of being organic, and that instead it
was diatomite.
“Because
of the failures that we witnessed after we did the testing, we went ahead and
withdrew the product. We suspended the permit and seized the product in the
NCPB warehouses, we have not seen the fertiliser anywhere else,” the KEBS boss
said.
Members
of the committee expressed fears that the fertiliser had been in the market for
a year before the standards body found out that it was not fit for use in the
country.
“How
often do you do your surveillance? What is the effect to the farmers that
bought and used this fertiliser? Does it have any effect to the crops?” Posed
committee chair and Tigania West MP Mutunga.
Ms.
Ngari however said they swung into action after tip-off from a journalist on
the possibility of the fertiliser being counterfeit, although they were
initially denied by the NCPB to take samples and test the fertiliser until they
wrote and official request.
She
however insisted that the fertiliser was not among the subsidized fertiliser
that is being sold by the government.
The
committee that is investigating the possibility of substandard fertiliser being
sold to Kenyan farmers is set to meet Agriculture Cabinet Secretary Mithika
Linturi and NCPB next week on the same issue.
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