In Kitui County, interest in biogas and regenerative farming had been rising, but too often potential was lost for lack of expertise. Systems would be installed, then underutilized; bioslurry would pile up unused; youth had little access to green skills; women didn’t always know how to incorporate sustainable practices in home gardens. Without capacity, technology alone couldn’t deliver.

  • Biogas digesters poorly maintained, malfunctioning.

  • Households paying for fertilizers while ignoring that bioslurry could replace them.

  • Youth unemployment high in rural areas; little opportunity to learn technical green skills.

  • Women’s agricultural potential under-leveraged in household food security.

Structured, Hands-On Training Program

Responding to demand, CIDESgreen launched a capacity development initiative. Key elements:

  1. Awareness Campaigns: Educating farmers, women, youth about biogas, bioslurry, and regenerative agriculture.

  2. Demonstration Farms: Live digesters, kitchen gardens using bioslurry, field trials to show yield differences.

  3. Technical Training for Artisans: How to build, maintain, repair biogas systems; piping; dome masonry; safety protocols.

  4. Women-Centric Modules: Incorporation of bioslurry in kitchen gardens; nutritional crops; household budgeting with savings from fuel and fertilizer.

Implementation Process

  • Month 1: Mobilization and community meetings; baseline survey to record households’ energy and fertilizer expenditure, awareness levels.

  • Month 2–3: Conduct training sessions; spread across several zones in Kitui for accessibility.

  • Month 4: Apprenticeships and hands-on work; new artisans practice installations in real settings.

  • Month 5: Follow-up monitoring and support; feedback loops to fix technical issues or usage mistakes.

Results & Measurable Impact

  • Increased Yields: Farmers switching to bioslurry saw 30–40% higher crop yields, especially in maize/vegetables.

  • Cost Reductions: Fuel, fertilizer, and chemical input costs dropped substantially.

  • Job Creation: Dozens of youth certified as biogas artisans; several now earning income by performing installations or repairs.

  • Women Empowered: Kitchen gardens with organic inputs produced food for household nutrition and surplus for income.

  • Behavioral Change: Communities developed maintenance culture; gas digesters tended regularly; bioslurry used properly; waste utilized rather than ignored.

There was joy in discovery — when farmers tasted vegetables grown with bioslurry, when youth saw their own hands build a gas dome, when women harvested produce from their gardens. Not invisible benefit, but visible change: healthier bodies, cleaner air, fuller plates, families working with pride.

This program delivers multiplier effects: one trained artisan serves multiple households; one kitchen garden feeds many; savings from inputs go back into community. The model is cost-effective, scalable, and holistically addresses environment + food security + economic growth. It builds local capacity so CIDES’ projects aren’t one-offs but sustained.