30 percent families in Karnali Province self reliant on agricultural production
Thirty percent of families in Karnali Province are self reliant on the agricultural productions, according to the national agriculture census, 2078. A large 70 percent cannot feed themselves with the productions throughout the year.
Out of the total 302,000 families who have taken up the job of agriculture in the province, the productions sustain only 90,600 families throughout the year, said the report published here by the National Statistics Office.
In the province, 82.63 percent of people are farmers who do agriculture in 17,411 hectares of land.
In the context that a large chunk of people are dependent on agriculture, but the productions are not enough to make them self reliant on it, the government should bring a production friendly policy, said Badri Kumar Karki, the NSO director.
“Most of the citizens of Karnali are involved in agriculture. But the productions are very low. It is necessary for the government to bring a production friendly plan in the days to come,” he said. In doing agriculture, farmers are found to have used new technology replacing old one. For an instance, tractors and power tillers have replaced iron or wooden ploughs, according to the report.
With increasing trend of migrating to city areas and foreign countries for various purposes including job opportunities, many lands especially in the hilly areas have remained barren.
Against this backdrop, warning that dependence would increase due to a lack of production activities, experts have suggested that the government bring plan based on the statistics.
Saying that it was increasingly difficult to bring a plan and a budget due to the lack of statistics of the province, Minister for Land Management, Agriculture and Cooperatives of the province, Bhim Prakash Sharma said these statistics would help the government to make a plan and bring a budget.
He also stressed the need for the government at all three levels to bring a plan so as to increase the productions and guarantee a market.
Around 7,000 workforces were mobilised for the census and it took 45 days, said Dr Dilliraj Joshi, joint secretary and deputy chief of the NSO.
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