FOOD SECURITY students from Scotland's rural college have travelled to Kenya to learn about food production and distribution, as well as retailing, poverty and malnutrition, in developing countries.

The 21 students, who are studying for a Masters degree in Food Security at SRUC Edinburgh, were hosted by the Jomo Kenyatta University of Agriculture and Technology in Nairobi.

Professor Daniel Sila, head of the Department of Food Science at JKUAT, together with colleagues from the Department of Agricultural Economics, gave presentations on the work being done on food security and the introduction of new food products – including so-called orphan crops such as millet, yam, roots and tubers, which are regionally important but not traded around the world.

Students also visited the International Livestock Research Institute, where Dr Nadhem Mtimet organised a programme to show the importance of farm animals for food security in developing countries; new varieties of feedstuff; and the socioeconomic work being carried out in the beef and dairy sector in Africa.

This was followed by a visit to the World Agroforestry Centre, where Dr Stepha McMullin introduced students to the role of fruit trees and biodiversity in providing nutrition for smallholder farmers in rural areas, and showed them the work of the African Orphan Crops Consortium.

In addition, they toured an urban dairy farm; tea and coffee estates and their processing plants; local markets and supermarkets; and a fruit and vegetable company that exports to the UK.

Programme director Dr Montserrat Costa-Font said: “Overall, the week of visits gave students an excellent insight into the different dimensions of food security in Kenya, as well as the operation of value chains from farm to fork.”