Photo: David Swanson/IRIN. Nepal has one of the highest livestock densities in the world
Source: IRIN
BELDANGI, 24 July 2013 (IRIN) - Outside his rural home in eastern Nepal,
Krishna Prasad Dangal knows all too well the importance of livestock.
“These animals mean everything to me,” said the 36-year-old father of
three. “Without them, I can’t support my family.”
His entire livelihood is based on two buffaloes, two oxen, a cow, and
six goats, along with whatever he can harvest from his field. He earns
6,000 rupees (US$62) a month.
He is not alone. According to the government, 87 percent of the
country’s 27 million people keep some form of livestock at home.
“Livestock is closely aligned with Nepal’s very livelihood,” Nar Bahadur
Rajwar, director-general of livestock services within Nepal’s Ministry
of Agriculture Development, told IRIN in Kathmandu. “Without it rural
families cannot sustain themselves.”
With 5.8 heads of livestock and poultry per household, Nepal has one of the highest ratios of livestock to humans in Asia.
But despite its importance, it is a sector in decline.
Agricultural productivity in Nepal is one of the lowest in South Asia
and has been stagnant in recent years, the result of failure to achieve
adequate productivity from the animals, maintain their health, and
ensure access to resources for farmers raising livestock, studies show.
Low productivity of animals
According to the 2012 Nepal Agricultural Development Strategy (ADS), a
joint project of Nepal’s ministries of finance and agriculture
development and more than a dozen donor agencies, “the core problem of
the livestock sub-sector is low productivity of animals.”
At the same time, given the local tradition of equating wealth with the
number of animals one has, many farmers keep animals that are less than
productive - despite the obvious cost implications of taking care of
them.
Experts attribute low productivity to historically weak livestock
practices by farmers, the genetic inferiority of local breeds, and weak
government policies. For example, according to ADS, while breed
improvement programmes started more than 50 years ago, a draft breeding
policy remains “under review”.
Farmer behaviour can also impact livestock productivity, they say.
“Many Nepali farmers have been using the same livestock husbandry
practices for generations without thinking systematically about labour
costs and inputs, or potential economic benefits from the animals,” said
Keshav Prasad Sah, animal wellbeing programme manager at the Nepal
office of Heifer International, an organization that provides livestock and technical training to farmers.
As a result of poor productivity from local animals, each year Nepal imports thousands of stronger breeds from India.
While official figures put goat imports from India at about 500,000 per
year, Sah estimates it is closer to one million, given the frequency of
undocumented or informal goat trading across the 1,690km porous border.
“People prefer Indian goats because they have more meat on them. They
are a better breed,” Sah explained, saying that while the genetics are a
strong factor, a small part of the disparity can be attributed to how
the animals are raised.
Aiming to curb goat imports by up to 30 percent, Heifer runs a
month-long training programme for Nepali farmers and community animal
health workers (CAHWs) featuring topics ranging from how to find forage
and shed construction, to identifying the symptoms of common diseases.
“Well-managed livestock can change the lives of farmers, their families,
and their entire villages and district. It just depends on higher and
more stable productivity,” Sah stressed.
According to government estimates, only 10-20 percent of all livestock
are commercially managed - the rest are owned by small farmers. Only
poultry figures are higher at 40-45 percent.
Most villages cannot access vets
Access to health services for livestock remains a major problem for
farmers and animal disease has resulted in millions of dollars of
economic losses in recent years.
The problem is compounded by the lack of proper breeding and animal husbandry practices.
Government agricultural extension service offices have been established in all 75 districts of the country, but it is estimated they reach only 15 percent of farming households.
And while the Nepal Veterinary Council
has registered 698 veterinarians in the country to date, nearly 73
percent of villages remain without government-supported services.
“We’ve made progress, but huge challenges remain. We’re still not in a
position to provide services in all areas,” the government’s Rajwar
said.
Most of the more than 5,000 “village animal health workers” (government
employees) report being technically ill-equipped and under-utilized by
local farmers.
“We’ve seen farmers who get a new goat and then six months later
complain that it’s too skinny and not producing milk. When we visit the
farm, we see the goat has no shed and is freezing at night,” said
Heifer’s Sah, who is a veterinarian. “It’s these little details about
livestock care and identifying when an animal is sick that we have to
bring with the animals we provide,” he said.
Farming cooperatives - originally touted for helping smallholder farmers
access markets - can also pave the way the way for access to veterinary
care.
“Cooperatives are a two-way street: farmers come and report their
livestock issues, so a vet can advise during regular visits, and
development partners can track trends in what these farmers are
complaining about so we can design training programmes effectively,”
said Sujan Piya, head of the Agriculture, Food Security and Markets
Programme at Practical Action Nepal.
“It’s a much cheaper option for farmers than calling a vet from a city
to come to their farm. The difference can be in some cases a farmer
paying 50 rupees (50 US cents) instead of several thousand rupees to
find out what is wrong with his cow,” Piya explained.
Land crunch
Nepal’s widespread poor road conditions
can limit market access and livestock feed delivery to rural areas,
which means farmers have to rely on local fodder products to feed their
animals.
Such isolation can spell danger for livestock holders in rural areas.
While experts say isolation can be partially mitigated by small-scale
animal husbandry, local resources are now being stretched thinly by land
inheritance fragmentation practices.
“The way families divide up land here means every generation has less to
work with,” explained Sah, adding that for some communities this can
mean migration for grazing becomes necessary, while the land crunch
leads others to give up livestock.
According to the 2012 ADS, “without forage development, livestock production and productivity cannot be increased efficiently.”
Forage management vital
Farmers turning to local feed sources for their livestock face the
historical stigma of grazing being associated with widespread forest
degradation, a problem various forestry programmes have been trying to alleviate for decades.
“Not too long ago farmers were told by forestry experts that their
animals were a problem, that they needed to keep them out of the
forests,” explained Shrawan Adhikary of the UN Food and Agriculture
Organization, “now they’re told goats are good, goats will help them not
be poor, so we have to be clear that it’s a full package involving
proper forage management.”
And animals’ roles in sustaining farms in rural areas must not be understated, experts warn.
“Every year there is a call for chemical fertilizer, but what is less
visible because the fertilizer often doesn't make it up [into the hills
and mountains due to bad roads] is how the depletion of livestock leads
to nutrient depletion in the soil as well,” ADS project director Shyam
Poudyal explained.
“When animal numbers go down in these areas, the soil suffers, as does all related farming,” he said.
At the same time, the degree of isolation some farmers in Nepal’s hills
and mountains face, experts say, means their future in farming might
rely even more on the animals they raise.
“Bad roads and other weak infrastructure in remote locations mean
mechanization of farming isn’t possible in the foreseeable future,” said
Practical Action’s Piya.
“In many ways, this makes livestock - for their labour and manure - even more important to farmers.”
Two-thirds of citizens rely on agriculture for their economic well-being and, according to the World Bank, the sector contributes 40 percent of the country’s GDP.