The government is
planning to open 50 cooperative-run vegetable markets across the country aiming
at reducing prices for consumers and benefiting farmers.
Ministry of Agriculture
Development has decided to establish the vegetable markets to provide direct
market access to the farmers.
The markets will be
operated without middlemen, so farmers and consumers will get benefit, said
secretary of the ministry Jayamukunda Khanal, here today.
Studies commissioned by
the ministry had showed that middlemen were major beneficiaries in the
vegetable trade. They were found earning above 50 per cent of farm-gate price
in a short time from collection to selling to wholesalers. "It will reduce
vegetable price in market," he said.
The ministry has also
planned to establish 10 pocket areas for vegetable farming to provide
vegetables in the market. "Our officials have been working on it," he
said, adding that vegetable sold in the market will be pesticide and other
chemical free.
The ministry is
establishing 10 division offices of Department Food Technology and Quality
Control in the areas, he added.
Similarly, Khanal
informed that the ministry is studying feasibility of chemical fertiliser
factory to establish one organic fertiliser factory each in a development
region. "Feasibility of chemical fertiliser factory will complete by Poush
end (mid-January)," he said, adding that the government is also providing
50 per cent custom duty exemption in importing equipments for organic
fertilisers.
Japan International
Cooperation Agency (JICA) had conducted first study on chemical fertiliser
factory in 1986.
The ministry is
importing about 300,000 metric tonnes (MT) of chemical fertiliser worth Rs 8.52
billion. "We have imported about 110,000 MT chemical fetiliser till date
for the current fiscal year," he said.
According to managing
director of Agriculture Inputs Company Shashiraj Tuladhar, the company has
about 60,000 MT chemical fertiliser stock. "We are importing 60,000 MT in
next four months and Indian government will supply 45,000 MT in quota," he
added.
In the meeting,
secretary at the Prime Minister's Office Krishnahari Baskota said that the
government needs to help farmers with modern equipments and techniques.
"We should provide subsidy in import of agriculture equipments like
thresher, grader, harvester," he said, adding that the government should
bear 50 per cent interest paid for crops and livestock insurances.
The government has put
agriculture sector in its top priority list. Nepal Rastra bank has also
directed commercial banks to lend 10 per cent of the total loan portfolio in
agriculture and energy sectors.
Similarly, the
government has made at least 15 per cent investment from their budget in
agriculture sector mandatory to local bodies.
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