After years of enduring drought and conflict over pasture, communities in Mandera county are turning to fodder farming to ensure livestock feed.

A European Union funded project dubbed The Building Opportunities for Resilience in the Horn of Africa (Boresha-Nabad) has trained 361 farmer groups in Mandera East and Lafey constituencies on the adoption of climate-smart fodder production.

This is part of the project's broader initiative to support communities in Kenya's borderlands to better adapt their livelihoods to climate change and environmental degradation.

The project seeks to enhance adoption of climate-smart agro-pastoral techniques and climate-resilient income-generation activities, particularly among women and youth.