
Listening to Siaya County's climate story

In Siaya County, on the shores of Lake Victoria, farmers have a phrase for what climate change has done to their lives. The rains, they say, "no longer follow the calendar." They come late, stop too early, or fall in a single violent afternoon instead of spreading gently across a season. "You cannot know when to plant anymore," one farmer told the project team. Seeds rot in waterlogged soil, or dry to nothing in ground that never got its second rain.
That sentence, the rains no longer follow the calendar, captures something official climate data rarely does: how the crisis actually feels to the people living it. Over three months in late 2025, Ushahidi and our local partner Kijiji Yeetu set out to gather hundreds of those accounts across Ugunja Sub-County, and to turn them into something Siaya's leaders could act on.
"You cannot know when to plant anymore. The seeds either rot in the soil or dry up." Farmer, Ugunja Sub-County.
The Lake Basin region has long been overlooked in Kenya's national climate planning, even as flooding, drought, and degradation have grown more severe. Part of the problem is invisibility: when there is no good local data on how communities experience climate shocks, it is easy for decision-makers to look away.
So the project began by listening across both the digital spaces where younger residents gather and the doorsteps of those the internet never reaches.
The project combined digital listening (Facebook and X) with on-the-ground engagement, so that no single channel's blind spots would shape the findings:

What emerged was a steady accumulation of strain. Residents near market centres and riverbanks described sudden floods that turn roads to rivers and push contaminated water into homes, followed by spikes in malaria, typhoid, and cholera. Others spoke of heat that has made the county "too hot compared to the past," drying water pans and exhausting the farmers and boda boda riders who work in it. Women and girls described walking far longer for clean water during dry spells, hours taken from school, work, and farming.

Then came an observation no rainfall chart would have predicted. Across the validation sessions, residents kept returning to something that, on its face, has nothing to do with weather: crime.
People reported a rise in petty theft of farm produce, livestock, household goods and they linked it directly to climate hardship. When floods destroy a harvest or drought wipes out livestock, income vanishes, and the pressure spills over into the community. "People feel overwhelmed," participants said, "tired of struggling every season." Youth spoke of anxiety about a future that feels foreclosed. For the community, the lesson was blunt: climate change is no longer only an environmental problem. It has become a question of social stability, safety, and mental health.
The accounts gathered across Ugunja pointed to a handful of clear, recurring lessons the kind that emerge only when people describe their own reality rather than answer a checklist:

Listening was only the first half. In December, the team brought its findings back to the people who had shaped them. At the validation session, community members and sub-county representatives reviewed the data, confirmed what rang true, and corrected what did not. The result was a shared set of recommendations the community owns: stronger flood early-warning systems, climate-smart farming and drought-resistant crops, better water management, cleaner energy to replace charcoal, enforcement of rules on sand harvesting and deforestation, and climate decisions that include the people most affected.
Those recommendations are now being channelled into the Siaya County Climate Change Action Plan and the Ugunja Integrated Development Plan, with technical support to the county's climate planning committee and a dedicated policy brief turning a season of conversations into a place at the table.
The Siaya project delivered with our local partner Kijiji Yeetu and funded by our good partners GIZ Kenya is a small demonstration of a larger idea Ushahidi has pursued for nearly twenty years: that the people closest to a crisis understand it best, and that the right tools can carry their knowledge to the people with the power to act.
The rains in Siaya may no longer follow the calendar. But for the first time, the community's own account of what that means is written down, validated, and on its way into county policy.
Online voices captured
Voices fully verified and classified as climate relevant
Voices captured through interviews
Ushahidi Platform
Distant Voices Platform