30 Apr Building Kenya’s Future Food System: One Year of the Kenya Interactive Food System Model
The Sustainable Nutrition Initiative (SNi®) recently celebrated the one-year anniversary of the development of Kenya’s first interactive food system model (KeIFSM). The model is designed to support the transformation of Kenya’s national food system, promoting long-term sustainability and improved nutrition security for the country’s population of more than 53 million people.
The $3.4 million project is expected to be delivered over three years. The award of this fund reflects the strength and quality of science led by the SNi team at the Riddet Institute in Palmerston North. The project is funded by the Gates Foundation, a leading philanthropic organization focused on global food and health security, which supports initiatives with the potential for substantial global impact. SNi is leading the project in collaboration with the International Livestock Research Institute (ILRI). The vision is to co-create a decision tool for evidence-based food systems governance in Kenya.
It’s a truly collaborative project. Over 180 people from more than 100 organizations across the farming, production, public, and private sectors have expressed interest in being involved or in seeing how they could utilize the model.
At a stakeholder workshop held in Nairobi in October 2025, Agriculture Secretary Mr. Collins Marangu, of the State Department for Agriculture, Ministry of Agriculture and Livestock Development, Kenya, thanked the stakeholders for the important role they play in developing the model.
“The efficacy of this model hinges on a truly inclusive and participatory co-design process… This engagement today will lay the groundwork for a living tool that evolves with our national priorities and stakeholder insights.”
The workshop hosted over 60 delegates from the government, civil society, private sector, research institutes, and development partners. Ten desired outcomes for food system transformation in Kenya were identified, including enhanced food sovereignty, equitable access to nutritious diets, reduced non-communicable disease burden, sustainable agroecological production, and increased farmer productivity and income.
Developing a decision support tool that enables informed choices to drive change in the food system does not come without difficult decisions. Trade-offs must be made between cost and sustainability, high-yield crops versus traditional seed systems and biodiversity, and market-oriented production for export versus local nutrition needs. However, recognising these tensions early enables the model to simulate and visualise where interventions might conflict or complement one another, creating a platform for evidence-based dialogue rather than ideological debate.
“This process moves us from talking about transformation to building the tools that make transformation measurable,” said one workshop participant from the Ministry of Agriculture.
As we move into our second year of model development, we will focus our efforts on building the first version of the model, integrating data, and incorporating the feedback from the stakeholder workshop and subsequent interactions. This version will be demonstrated to stakeholders later in 2026 to gather feedback on functionality and the model’s usefulness in representing future food system scenarios for Kenya.
The KeIFSM aligns closely with other models developed by SNi, helping to improve understanding of the food system and identify opportunities to sustainably feed the global population with the nutrients required.
Access to SNi’s other models is available here: Models & Tools – Sustainable Nutrition Initiative®
If you would like to stay in touch with developments of the model, please reach out to info@sustainablenutritioninitiative.com
