Financial aid is urgently needed to help disaster-struck Nepalese farmers rapidly recover lost agricultural inputs and resume preparations for the imminent rice sowing season, the Food and Agricultural Organization (FAO) of United Nations said Thursday.
The Rome-based UN agency said the impact of the recent major earthquake on food security and agricultural livelihoods expected to be very high and some 8 million US dollars will be needed for Nepalese farmers.
Farmers who miss the planting season that is expected to start late May onwards will be unable to harvest rice - the country's staple food - again until late 2016. This, together with likely losses of food stocks and wheat and maize harvests, would severely limit food supplies and incomes in the South Asian country, where around two-thirds of people rely on agriculture for their livelihood, FAO said.
Last week, a 7.8 magnitude earthquake - the country's biggest in 80 years - shook Nepal, killing thousands while limiting access to food and leaving some 3.5 million in need of food assistance. Millions of people across the country's Western and Central Regions are affected by the disaster, including its largest cities, Kathmandu and Pokhara.
But some of the country's most vulnerable agricultural areas, particularly the villages in mountainous and hilly regions, also bore the brunt.
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Although damage to the agriculture sector has not yet been assessed, affected families have likely lost livestock, crops, food stocks and valuable agricultural inputs. At the same time, the disaster has destroyed markets and infrastructure, including roads and crucial irrigation and drainage canals. As a result, internal trade, including the movement of emergency assistance, is severely constrained.
Before the earthquake, FAO estimated Nepal's wheat production in 2015 at 1.8 million tons - some 5 percent below last year's record harvest. But crop damage and farmer's inability to harvest in earthquake-affected areas are likely to change this forecast.
In addition, disruption of planting operations for rice and maize may severely reduce the planted area for these crops in the most affected areas.
In addition to distributing crop-production packages to secure this year's harvest, FAO and partners will support the Nepalese government in preventing further loss of livestock by providing animal feed and veterinary supplies that will ensure animals stay healthy and productive for families relying on them for food and income, FAO said.