Close Menu
  • News
  • Counties
  • International News
  • Sports
  • Technology and Innovation
  • Our Forum
  • Contact Us
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Trending
  • From Street Dust to Millionaire Moves, How I Finally Broke the Chains of Poverty
  • Mother and children hospitalised after hit-and-run accident in Makueni
  • Astronauts in space for nine months didn’t know if they would ‘be able to make it back’
  • Who will be crowned European Champions between PSG and Inter Milan?
  • Govt pushes sunflower farming to cut oil imports, boost incomes
  • Dutch lured from Dubai to Kakamega, robbed Sh3.6m in fake gold deal
  • Champions Blazers clash with MSC and Sliders in hunt for maximum points
  • How to avoid egg production losses in your laying flocks
Facebook X (Twitter)
Breaking Kenya News
Leaderboard Ad
  • News
  • Counties
  • International News
  • Sports
  • Technology and Innovation
  • Our Forum
  • Contact Us
Breaking Kenya News
You are at:Home»OPINION»Kebs: Poor food handling costs Kenya Sh76 billion annually
OPINION

Kebs: Poor food handling costs Kenya Sh76 billion annually

Kevin TevBy Kevin TevMay 23, 2025No Comments2 Mins Read
Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email

Kenya is losing an estimated Sh76 billion worth of food every year due to poor handling and food safety practices, the Kenya Bureau of Standards (Kebs) has revealed.

As the country gears up for World Food Safety Day on June 7, 2025, under the theme ‘Food Safety: Science in Action,’ Kebs has issued a strong appeal to all stakeholders in the food value chain to prioritise food safety from the point of production to the consumer’s plate.

Speaking during a food safety workshop in Nairobi on Thursday, Kebs managing director Esther Ngari highlighted the critical need to address food handling practices.

“Food safety is everyone’s business,” she said. “As Kebs, we are very keen about how food is handled from the farm, through the distribution chain, all the way to the consumer’s plate.”

This comes following recent cases of consumption of illegal brews that led to blindness and deaths, attributed to suppliers using toxic products during the industrial process.

Kebs said they are addressing the sale of such toxic substances for human consumption, a war they are fighting to win in the supply industry.

The workshop was hosted by Kebs in collaboration with retailer Carrefour to train suppliers on applicable standards for hygienic handling of food products.

Ngari said the workshop would improve healthy food distribution and quality standards.

“About 40 per cent of food is removed from the distribution chain daily on issues of unreliable food supplies to consumers but I firmly believe facilitation on the issue will have a positive outcome,” she said.

According to Kebs, poor post-harvest handling, inadequate storage, and inefficient transportation systems are the leading contributors to the huge annual food losses.

These result in food rotting in markets, being damaged during transit, or getting contaminated during processing.

“Tomatoes, for example, are highly perishable. Without proper storage or cold chain solutions, they rot before they reach consumers,” Ngari noted.

Kebs manager in charge of food standards Peter Mutua said the agency is partnering with farmers, processors, distributors, and retailers to reduce food waste and convert potential losses into profits.

“If we eliminate post-harvest food losses, we are injecting Sh76 billion into the economy,” he said. “That’s real money in the pockets of farmers, traders, and mama mbogas. This is about turning agriculture into a profitable business.”

 

By Clare Ochieng

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
Kevin Tev

Related Posts

From Street Dust to Millionaire Moves, How I Finally Broke the Chains of Poverty

“My father hated me, forced me to undergo circumcision twice” – Youngblood Kamotho’s childhood trauma

Why women should embrace cryptocurrency

Categories
  • business
  • Counties
  • ENTERTAINMENT
  • International News
  • News
  • OPINION
  • Sports
  • Technology and Innovation
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Instagram
  • Pinterest
  • Popular
  • Recent
  • Top Reviews
March 17, 2018

Barclays launches mobile loan app

February 4, 2019

Hyena mauls boy to death in Laikipia, injures father

February 16, 2019

How corruption and impunity are aiding terrorism in Kenya

May 31, 2025

From Street Dust to Millionaire Moves, How I Finally Broke the Chains of Poverty

May 31, 2025

Mother and children hospitalised after hit-and-run accident in Makueni

May 31, 2025

Astronauts in space for nine months didn’t know if they would ‘be able to make it back’

Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest
  • Home
  • About Us
  • Authors
  • Contact Us
Copyright © 2025 ThemeSphere. Powered by WordPress.

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.