History
The Cotton Lint and Seed Marketing Board
The first legal instrument to regulate the Cotton Industry in Kenya was the Cotton
Lint and Seed Marketing Act of 1955 which formed the Cotton Lint and Seed
Marketing Board whose main function was to purchase both lint and seed from
the ginners and advice the Minister of Agriculture on the prices to be paid by
ginners to growers.
Cotton Board of Kenya
The Cotton Lint and Seed Marketing Act of 1955 was repealed by the Cotton Act,
Cap 335 in 1990 and established the Cotton Board of Kenya as a State
Corporation under the Ministry of Agriculture.
Cotton Development Authority
The Cotton Act was amended in 2006 to create Cotton Development Authority
under section 3.
The Sisal Board of Kenya
The first legal instrument to govern the production of sisal was the Sisal Industry
Act, 1946 (No. 77 of 1946) which established the Sisal Board of Kenya. This Act
made provision for the promotion and control of the sisal industry. In 1951 the
Sisal Industry (Sale of Sisal and Collection of Cess) Rules, were made under the
Sisal Industry Act Cap 341 to regulate some aspects of the sale of sisal or sisal
fibre. As per these rules, no sisal or sisal fibre produced within Kenya was to be
sold except through an agent duly licensed under section 7 of the Act and the
Board was, from time to time, would prescribe conditions to a licence and
determine the prices that should be paid for sisal and sisal fibre.
Agriculture and Food Authority - Fibre Crops Directorate
The Ministry for Agriculture initiated structural reforms in 2010 which sought to
reduce multiplicity of regulatory and research functions; maximize benefits of
economies of scale by merging parastatals with similar or related functions; and
strengthen the capacity of parastatals responsible regulation and research to
effectively undertake their core mandates. These reforms culminated in the
enactment of the Agriculture and Food Authority Act, No. 13 of 2013; The Crops
Act, No. 16 of 2013 and the Kenya Agriculture and Livestock Research Act, 2013
(KALR Act, No. 17 of 2013). Following the operationalization of the Crops Act
2013, the Cotton Act, Cap 335 Cap 335 and Sisal Industry Act, 1946 (No. 77 of
1946) the of parliament were repealed and subsequently the Fibre Crops
Directorate was established and assumed the functions of the Sisal Board of
Kenya and Cotton Development Authority. To date, the regulatory, development
and promotion mandate of the fibre value chains is under the AFA-Fibre Crops
Directorate.
After the merger of former Boards responsible for various value chains to form the Agriculture and Food Authority (AFA), the envisaged efficiency gains were not realized due to challenges that included, lack of a Board of Directors, inefficiencies in operations, financing challenges following the revocation of crop levies in 2016. These reforms did not achieve the intended objectives leading to the general decline in the performance of all the major crop sub-sectors and raising concern among stakeholders many of whom have continued to agitate for the Ministry reintroduction of the former regulatory boards. In an attempt to address these challenges, the Ministry for Agriculture initiated further reforms which led to the enactment of the Tea Act in 2022. Subsequently the Board of AFA was constituted in 2023, in order to strengthen the effectiveness of the Authority in its mandate to regulate, develop and promote the scheduled crops sub-sectors.