Safi Organics - Organic fertiliser for regenerative farming | Knowledge Hub | Circle Economy Foundation
imageimage
image
Business case
Safi Organics - Organic fertiliser for regenerative farming
0
0

Safi Organics produces organic fertilisers within local communities in Kenya. They recognised the problems of fertilisers that are produced in large-scale and centralized facilities. These fertilisers not only add to the cost of food production for small-scale farmers, but also have negative impacts on the soil and the environment. Safi Organics use their technology to downsize and decentralize fertiliser production, which reduces the logistical cost and creates job opportunities in local communities. The carbon-rich fertiliser also serves to sequester carbon. Their conversion process reduces particulate emissions by more than 95%.

Samuel Rigu was close to his grandmother, who encouraged him to get educated because the farmland she farmed would not produce any more in the future. Upon growing up, he started develping solutions to make use of residual waste from the farms. After a number of trials, Safi Organics started producing soil amendments for farmers to optimise their yield. Since 2015, the solution has scaled up from soil amendments to organic fertilisers through investing in research.
Problem
The cost of fertiliser in Africa is high and the prices are prone to disruption in the market. Recently fertiliser costs have doubled, partly because of the war in Ukraine. Most farmers who are unable to afford the costly fertiliser rely on cheap synthetic fertiliser, These results in reduced yields and increased food insecurity. Safi Organics helps by bringing the production of soil-specific fertilisers and soil amendments to local villages. Farmers can get products that best fit their soil and are locally produced.
Solution
Safi Organics produces soil amendments and fertilisers from farming residues. They produce about 6,000 tonnes of compost per day (2-3 times more than in 2020) and they collaborate with 10,000 farmers. They are also working on scaling to other parts of Kenya and looking to replicate their model in India. When growing up, the founder
Outcome
Safi Organic employs youth groups from the informal sector who receive training to use Safi Organics’ technology and collect biomass that is needed for the production. Then the groups collect the organic waste and sell it to Safi Organics, who uses it to produce the fertiliser. Three out of the nine groups are led by women.
Additional information

This case study has been created as part of Footprints Africa's work to build a comprehensive open-source database of circular economy initiatives in Africa. We are doing this in collaboration with the African Circular Economy Network (ACEN), as part of our programme to support the circular economy transition in Africa.


image retrieved from https://safiorganics.co.ke/wp-content/uploads/2021/07/PCopyofSafiPackagedfertilizers.jpg

Relevant links