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Cold Chains, from Net to Fork: Evidence from Kenya on Livelihoods and Community Resilience

Cold Chains, from Net to Fork: Evidence from Kenya on Livelihoods and Community Resilience

Publication ,  Report
Elsharief, M; Diaz-Herrera, A; Jeuland, M; Phillips, J; Vega Carol, F
December 5, 2025

Small-scale fisheries in Kenya support more than 1.5 million livelihoods but face mounting climate and market shocks that threaten food security and income stability. Research led by Duke University and the University of Nairobi evaluated the Keep IT Cool model—a private enterprise linking fishing communities around Lake Victoria and Lake Turkana to higher value markets trough solar-powered cold storage and logistics. Results show that access to cooling reduced post-harvest losses, improved nutritional diversity, and strengthened households’ ability to recover from shocks, though short-term income effects remain modest. The findings highlight the importance of pairing cold-chain technologies with financial tools and policy supports that lower capital costs and make resilience an investable outcome.

Duke Scholars

Publication Date

December 5, 2025

Publisher

James E. Rogers Energy Access Project
 

Citation

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Elsharief, M., Diaz-Herrera, A., Jeuland, M., Phillips, J., & Vega Carol, F. (2025). Cold Chains, from Net to Fork: Evidence from Kenya on Livelihoods and Community Resilience. Cold Chains, from Net to Fork: Evidence from Kenya on Livelihoods and Community Resilience. Durham, NC: James E. Rogers Energy Access Project.
Elsharief, Mirna, Alejandro Diaz-Herrera, Marc Jeuland, Jonathan Phillips, and Ferran Vega Carol. “Cold Chains, from Net to Fork: Evidence from Kenya on Livelihoods and Community Resilience.” Cold Chains, from Net to Fork: Evidence from Kenya on Livelihoods and Community Resilience. Durham, NC: James E. Rogers Energy Access Project, December 5, 2025.
Elsharief M, Diaz-Herrera A, Jeuland M, Phillips J, Vega Carol F. Cold Chains, from Net to Fork: Evidence from Kenya on Livelihoods and Community Resilience. Cold Chains, from Net to Fork: Evidence from Kenya on Livelihoods and Community Resilience. Durham, NC: James E. Rogers Energy Access Project; 2025 Dec.
Elsharief, Mirna, et al. “Cold Chains, from Net to Fork: Evidence from Kenya on Livelihoods and Community Resilience.” Cold Chains, from Net to Fork: Evidence from Kenya on Livelihoods and Community Resilience, James E. Rogers Energy Access Project, 5 Dec. 2025.
Elsharief M, Diaz-Herrera A, Jeuland M, Phillips J, Vega Carol F. Cold Chains, from Net to Fork: Evidence from Kenya on Livelihoods and Community Resilience. Cold Chains, from Net to Fork: Evidence from Kenya on Livelihoods and Community Resilience. Durham, NC: James E. Rogers Energy Access Project; 2025 Dec.

Publication Date

December 5, 2025

Publisher

James E. Rogers Energy Access Project