BBC Future
Matter of Life & Tech

Honey changes everything

About the author

Jonathan Kalan is an independent journalist and photographer specializing in social innovations in emerging markets. Based in Nairobi, Kenya, he frequently reports from around the region, specialising in the spaces where technological innovation, social justice and media converge. You can find him on Twitter at @kalanthinks

  • Smoked out
    A beekeeper working for Kenyan social business Honey Care Africa, harvests honey near Kakuzi farms, central Kenya. The smoke makes bees less aggressive.(Copyright: Jonathan Kalan)
  • Sweet deal
    Honey Care Africa sells low-paid farmers everything they need to start producing honey and guarantees a price for the product. (Copyright: Jonathan Kalan)
  • Hive mind
    The package costs around $50 for two hives from which a farmer can earn on average of around $175 per year. (Copyright: Jonathan Kalan)
  • Swarm around
    As well as producing a steady source of income, the honey bees also pollinate surrounding crops, increasing yields by 15-20% in some cases. (Copyright: Jonathan Kalan)
  • Family business
    Makasi John of Kitui District, Kenya, has eight beehives on her one acre of land, which goes towards paying her children's school fees. (Copyright: Jonathan Kalan)
  • To the world
    The organisation periodically collects the honey from farmers, before jarring it in Nairobi and selling it on the global market. (Copyright: Jonathan Kalan)
  • Sweet tooth
    Demand for honey is growing in many markets and prices are rising. The global market is expected to hit $12 billion by 2015. (Copyright: Jonathan Kalan)

HIDE CAPTION

The social business in East Africa that is using bees and smartphones to help lift subsistence farmers out of poverty.

Bees. Specifically African bees are probably not the first, or even fifth idea, that comes to mind when you think of alleviating poverty. Yet these little insects are causing a buzz by helping thousands of rural farmers in East Africa.

For the past twelve years, Kenyan social business Honey Care Africa has developed its innovative ‘Business in a Beehive’ model that has allowed low-income farmers to easily earn more money by producing honey.

The package gives farmers everything they need to start producing honey- a beehive, equipment, training, hive maintenance, and – most importantly of all - a contract for a guaranteed cash purchase of the resulting honey at fair market prices.

A simple beehive requires just 1 sq m (10 sq ft) of land and two to three hours of labor per month. With minimal effort, farmers can earn extra cash from producing honey.

That makes it an attractive investment for small rural farmers who often subsist on income from a single crop. With no monthly paycheck, inconsistent harvests make predictable income difficult. The honey, on the other hand, is a relatively stable and easy source of cash that farmers can depend on.

“We’ve created a modern supply chain connecting poor rural households in east Africa to global markets for honey,” says Madison Ayer, Honey Care Africa’s CEO.

The idea comes at a convenient time. Global demand for honey constantly exceeds supply, and with bee colonies mysteriously disappearing in the US and Europe, pure honey is becoming a valuable – and expensive - commodity. The price of honey in the US is rising more than 6% annually, and the market globally is expected to hit $12 billion by 2015.

The reason is that “there’s a certain magic to honey,” Ayers claims. “It’s the only food that insects produce that humans eat regularly, it’s packed with healthy micro-nutrients, and for thousands of years honey has been used for its medicinal value.”   

Aside from being a healthy and natural sweetener, honey is an antimicrobial, antibacterial, antiseptic, anti-inflammatory and antifungal.

Yet the production of honey is a very slow, decentralized process. It’s impossible to artificially produce or mass manufacture pure honey. You need honeybees, space, wild flowers and ample time to for the bees to pollinate and produce it.

Sweet bonus

In East Africa there are plenty of honeybees ready to meet the growing demand. But, until now,  challenges of infrastructure, knowledge and capital have left many locals to consider beekeeping a ‘cottage industry,’ and not a commercial business.

“One of the biggest challenges of honey production in Kenya is the fragmented value chain,” says Fred Ogana of TechnoServe, an international NGO that invests in business solutions to poverty, and recently completed an in-depth study of Kenya’s honey industry.

While many rural farmers keep bees, the traditional method of collecting honey results in low quality honey and low harvesting yields.

“Smallholder farmers typically produce honey in traditional logs, and when harvest day comes they pack it in old fruit juice bottles, and hawk it on the road sides” says Ogana.

Honey Care tries to make this process more efficient and predictable. Its package costs around $50 for two hives, and it has partnered with micro lending institutions like Kiva.org and local microfinance banks to help farmers get loans to purchase the package. Farmers can earn on average 15,000 Kenyan Shillings ($175) per year from two hives, making their return on investment substantial.

The organization has even found a way to help those people who are afraid of bees, but like the idea of a sweet income, by hiring fulltime beekeepers within villages to manage individual farmers hives. As an added bonus, pollination from the bees actually helps improve crop yields 15-30%, further adding to income.

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