We are here for Good. Let’s improve the agricultural system and infrastructure for better. Volunteer Aid Nepal currently has volunteer opportunities to assist with farming and improvement of the agricultural infrastructure in communities of Nepal.

Agricultural Land in Nepal
Nepal’s majority is Agriculture in South Asia. More than 60% of the people are directly engaged in Agricultural works but don’t have good output due to lack of skilled manpower and modern technology. The main objective of organizing Agriculture Aid Program is to help Rural Farmer to increase food production. This program includes support to a farmer, help in making Agriculture infrastructure, participating in agricultural works, sharing new ideas, working at field with farmer, suggesting to improve Agriculture System, preparing Rural Agricultural Report, encouraging the villagers for produce organic vegetable etc.
This program provides 2 types of volunteer participation namely the volunteers who are skilled in the field of agriculture and the others who have no knowledge on agriculture but wishes to work in this related field. The volunteers of both the groups will enjoy and get an opportunity to learn the traditional ways of farming, labor exchange system, free labor system, production of share system and other systems. Agriculture Aid Program provides you work opportunities in Traditional Farm of Rural Nepal for the ones who have no knowledge but enjoys working with the rural people. If you wish you can also help us to grow Agricultural Infrastructure by raising fund in your home country and can also implement the project in Nepal.
Program Requirement
Volunteers for program must:
-Be 18 years or older
-Have no major health problems
-Be eligible to obtain a tourist visa to Nepal
-Flexible, Committed and adjustable
Program Information
- Project Duration: Agricultural Infrastructure Construction Project ( 6 week ) and General Agriculture Volunteering ( 2-6 week)
- For General Agriculture Volunteering : Program will start 20th July of every year.
- For Agricultural Infrastructure Construction Project : You can join any time.
- Arrival Airport:Kathmandu (airport code KTM)
- Working Hours: 2 hour to 5 hour per day
Cost
Cost Information will be provided upon request by email at info@volunteeraidnepal.org
Location
The Project is located at Kavre and Kaski District
Agriculture
Agriculture in Nepal has long been based on subsistence farming, particularly in the hilly regions where peasants derive their living from fragmented plots of land cultivated in difficult conditions. Government programs to introduce irrigation facilities and fertilizers have proved inadequate, their delivery hampered by the mountainous terrain. Population increases and environmental degradation have ensured that the minimal gains in agricultural production, owing more to the extension of arable land than to improvements in farming practices, have been cancelled out. Once an exporter of rice, Nepal now has a food deficit.
Over 80 percent of the population is involved in agriculture, which constitutes 41 percent of GDP. The seasonal nature of farming leads to widespread underemployment, but programs to grow cash crops and encourage cottage industries have had some success over the years. Two-sevenths of the total land is cultivated, of which 1.5 million hectares produced 3.7 million metric tons of the staple crop of rice in 1999. Wheat and maize together take up a similar portion of the available land, with harvests of 1 million metric tons and 1.5 million metric tons, respectively, in 1999. Production of cash crops increased substantially in the 1970s, and sugarcane, oilseed, tobacco, and potatoes (a staple food in some areas) were the major crops. Agricultural production accounted for about three-fourths of total exports in the late 1980s. As noted earlier, most exports consist of primary agricultural produce which goes to India. In general the majority of Nepalese farmers are subsistence farmers and do not export surplus; this does not prevent a minority in the fertile southern Tarai region from being able to do so. Most of the country is mountainous, and there are pockets of food-deficit areas. The difficulties of transportation make it far easier to export across the border to India than to transport surplus to remote mountain regions within Nepal. A considerable livestock population of cattle, goats, and poultry exists, but the quality is poor and produces insufficient food for local needs.
Government efforts to boost the agricultural economy have focused on easing dependence on weather conditions, increasing productivity, and diversifying the range of crops for local consumption, export, and industrial inputs. Solutions have included the deployment of irrigation, chemical fertilizers, and improved seed varieties, together with credit provision, technical advice, and limited mechanization. This has had some effect. Land under irrigation increased from 6,200 hectares in 1956 to 583,000 hectares in 1990. The use of chemical fertilizers, introduced in the 1950s, climbed to about 47,000 metric tons by 1998. Still, the weather continues to determine good and bad years for the average farmer. On a national scale, while production of both food and cash crops grew annually by 2.4 percent from 1974 to 1989, population increased at a rate of 2.6 percent over the same period.
Increased agricultural activity has placed tremendous stress on the fragile ecosystems of the mountains, with severe deforestation leading to erosion and flooding that threatens the livelihoods of farmers throughout the country. In the rush to open up arable land in the early years of development, Nepal lost half its forest cover in the space of 3 decades. Government plans to maintain cover at 37 percent depend on the success of community forestry programs, which merge traditional and modern agro-forestry and conservation practices. Responsibility is placed in the hands of Forest User Groups, which included almost 800,000 households in 1999.
A potent issue is that of land reform. Before 1950, a feudal system held sway. Land ownership was concentrated in the hands of landlords who contracted out to tenant farmers. Increased productivity may have been suppressed by such a system. Even though the legal mechanisms for land reform (such as placing limits on the amount of land owned) do exist, in practice most farmers still have pitifully small holdings. Predictably, land reform has been the mandate of every political party in Nepal, particularly the communists.
Apply Now
Online Volunteer Application Form : http://volunteeraidnepal.org/apply/
Volunteer Aid Nepal would profoundly appreciate your application for volunteering in Nepal. You may wish to offer to be an Active Volunteer of above Program. The application is open for National and international Volunteers. You can also contact us at info@volunteeraidnepal.org or fill online form . Thank you.












