This site uses cookies, as explained in our terms of use. If you consent, please close this message and continue to use this site.
Organized by the Ministry of Agricultural Development (MoAD), Nepal and the International Centre for Integrated Mountain Development (ICIMOD), a three-day regional conference on mountain agriculture began at Hotel View Bhrikuti in Kathmandu, Nepal on 11 August 2017.
David Molden, Director General ICIMOD, called on a gathering of some 60 people—government officials, agri-extensionists, progressive farmers, and agriculture scientists—from the Hindu Kush Himalaya (HKH) to make the most of the opportunity the conference will provide to deliberate on the findings of the action research and pilot activities of the EU-funded Support to Rural Livelihoods and Climate Change in the Himalaya (Himalica) initiative to draw out lessons for uptake at the national and regional levels.
1 min Read
He said, “Some messages coming out of the Himalica experience are very clear. Improving farmers’, especially women farmers’, access to agri-extension services, recognizing the importance of indigenous honeybees and pollination services for enhancing crop productivity and food security, and promoting market linkages for mountain products are absolutely critical for improving agriculture-based livelihoods of poor and vulnerable mountain communities of the HKH.”
Since 2013, the Himalica initiative of ICIMOD has carried out action research activities on bee pollination services in Chitral, Pakistan and Himachal Pradesh, India and randomized control trial (RCT) studies on improving agri-extension services in 10 mid-hill districts of Nepal. In addition, it has worked on developing climate-resilient value chains of mountain products such as vegetables and goat in Bhutan, community-based ecotourism in Bangladesh, ginger and bamboo in Myanmar, large cardamom and vegetables in Nepal, and yak and sea buckthorn in Pakistan.
Especially noteworthy is the three-year (2013–2016) RCTstudies that looked at what incentive structures and delivery mechanisms work best in the effective delivery of agri-extension services to farming households in mid-hill Nepal. A surprising finding of this study was that women farmers are quicker to adopt agricultural technologies than their male counterparts.
In his inaugural keynote speech, Minister of Agricultural Development Ram Krishna Yadav said, “The findings of the action research on agri-extension shall inform the agriculture extension policy and programmes of Nepal, which are a precondition to transforming agriculture in Nepal.”
Newly appointed Vice Chair of the National Planning Commission of Nepal Swarnim Wagle acknowledged that Nepal’s agriculture sector is still mired in classic problems such as young people leaving agriculture for good for jobs abroad due to lack of employment opportunities at home, overdependence on rain-fed agriculture, and lack of access to agri-extension services, technologies and agricultural inputs. He said “The future of agriculture lies in exploring new modes of production to take advantage of the economies of scale and commercial, even precision farming, that continuously internalizes new policy-relevant, evidence-based findings from the ground up.”
Secretary at the Ministry of Agricultural Development Suroj Pokharel and Director at the Directorate of Agriculture Extension (DoAE) Niru Dahal Pandey also spoke at the inaugural session.
The regional conference will continue its deliberations on bee pollination services, agri extension services and market linkages, including promotion of climate-resilient livelihoods in the HKH, over the next two days.
Share
Stay up to date on what’s happening around the HKH with our most recent publications and find out how you can help by subscribing to our mailing list.
Related content
The Hindu Kush Himalayan (HKH) Partnership for Sustainable Mountain Development was launched during a ministerial-level panel discussion organized on 24 ...
Process The Passu valley was once bountiful. The Khunjerab and Shimshal rivers gradually eroded their banks, posing a very real threat ...
Through PhotoHKH, ICIMOD hoped to draw attention to change happening in the mountain areas of the Hindu Kush Himalaya and ...
The report is based on findings of a joint field assessment carried out by experts from the International Centre for ...
Introduction The spate of deadly disasters in the past 10 years stands testimony to the region’s vulnerability, especially that of isolated ...
The initiative was conceived in December 2016 when partners representing ICIMOD, the Support to Rural Livelihoods and Climate change Adaptation ...
Community members from Pragati, Jamuna, and Jana Pragati community forests in the Kayar Khola watershed of Nepal can now successfully ...
Resilience is the ability of communities and ecosystems to be prepared for shocks, recover from shocks, and “bounce forward” to ...