Expired fertilizer in NCPB to be destroyed

Agriculture & Livestock Development Cabinet Secretary Mutahi Kagwe

Agriculture & Livestock Development Cabinet Secretary Mutahi Kagwe ordered the destruction of 27,518 bags of an expired consignment of fertilizer held in various National Cereals and Produce Board (NCPB) stores across the country.

The Kenya Bureau of Standards (KEBS) is to supervise the safe destruction of this consignment of Sulphate of Ammonia (21%) fertilizer that was delivered to NCPB by Fine Tech Edge Ltd between 27th December 2024 and the 6th of January 2025.

According to the ministry, before contract execution samples of the fertilizer were drawn by the Kenya Bureau of Standards (KEBS) for testing and the results indicated that the fertilizer complied with the requirement for Sulphate of Ammonia (21%N) and NPK fertilizers as per Kenyan standards.

 The consignment, delivered to NCPB after a greenlight from KEBS, was 34,100 bags (50kg). However, on supply, NCPB noted the short shelf-life, which was to lapse on February 28th, 2025, as indicated in the packaging material. The supplier was notified of the same and requested to deliver fertilizer with a longer shelf life, as the entire consignment was unlikely to be sold by the end of February. Per standard operating procedures, the unsold fertilizer would not be released to the market and would be safely destroyed. The NCPB management issued a sale stoppage order of the same consignment on 27th February 2025. Further, KEBS seized the fertilizer on 4th March 2025 and has stopped any movement of the same until safe destruction.

As the supply of the fertilizer is on a consignment basis, and the ownership vests with the supplier until sold, this means that FineTech Edge Ltd will bear the costs, and loss.

 CS Kagwe reiterates that the government is committed to ensuring that Kenyan farmers access the highest quality of farm inputs, that public health and environmental standards are upheld, and at no time will these be compromised. He also urged players in the agricultural and livestock sectors to take-up insurance to mitigate such losses as the government and the Kenyan public will not incur any loss or costs.

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