Back to news

Kidney Beans Improve Income and Nutrition in Kailash Sacred Landscape

3 mins Read

70% Complete

 

ICIMOD’s Kailash Sacred Landscape Conservation and Development Initiative (KSLCDI), in partnership with the Central Himalayan Environment Association (CHEA), has identified kidney bean production as an income generating option to improve the livelihoods of the Vanrajis, an ethnic minority group indigenous to the Pithoragarh district of Uttarakhand in India and western Nepal.  The area is famous for producing high quality kidney beans – a cash crop which sells at a very high price in the markets within Pithoragarh district and beyond. KSLCDI introduced kidney beans production to Vanrajis to help them earn cash income.

Originally nomadic hunter-gatherers, Vanrajis were given scheduled tribe status in 1967 and put into settlements by the government in the 1980s. They are the smallest Himalayan ethnic group, and among the poorest, most vulnerable tribes in the country. In India, there are only 158 Vanraji families with a total population of 620, presently inhabiting nine villages in Pithoragarh district located at altitudes ranging between 789 to 1,700 meters above sea level. These include Aultari, Kulekh, Jamtari (Kanalichhina Development Block), Chifaltara, Bhagtirwa, Gainagaon, Kimkhola (Dharchula Development Block), Madanpuri, and Kuta-Chaurani (in Didihaat Development Block).

According to a study conducted by ICIMOD and CHEA, in 2013, the entire Vanraji population fell below the poverty line, with an estimated average annual family income of INR 20,242 and extremely low literacy (men: 46.8 percent; women: 3.9 percent). Their main sources of income ranged from wage labour to household poultry and livestock. Once landless, they were recently given marginally fertile land by the government. Families owned less than half a hectare of land, and around 51 percent owned less than 0.1 hectare.

Vanraji families in all villages grow subsistence food crops such as wheat, maize, finger millets, soybeans and black grams. However, this is sufficient only for two to three months a year. Vegetable cultivation was recently introduced by community based organisations to improve nutrition and cash income.

Key interventions include: organising Vanrajis into participatory groups; facilitating access to high quality seeds and other inputs; training in methods of cultivation and technical support; field trips to farmers cultivating kidney beans in Munshyari, a nationally famous area for kidney beans production; promotion of organic farming technologies such as vermicomposting and integrated pest management (IPM); support in packaging and branding; and facilitating marketing of produce.

In 2013, its first year of intervention, 40 households in five villages were engaged in kidney beans production on 50 nalis (one hectare) of land producing 226 kg (5 – 9 kg/household) of the crop. Initial production was less than expected due to heavy rains and floods and it being the first year of cultivation. However, farmers were excited and interested in continuing the following year. Encouraged by their positive response and interest the kidney beans, cultivation was expanded to all villages increasing the number of farmers and the area producing 1,500 kg in 2014. In 2015, cultivation was expanded further by engaging all 158 households, increasing the total area under cultivation to four hectares. The expected production is 2,000 kg.

Success story of Kaman Singh: a Vanraji farmer engaged in kidney beans production 

A progressive member of the Vanraji community with substantial land, Kaman Singh of Kulekh Jamtadi village was one of the first few farmers who agreed to take part in the pilot study. Unfortunately, the heavy rains and flooding in 2013 rendered his crop useless in the first year. In 2014 Singh planted two kilograms of kidney bean seeds in an area of two nalis (i.e. 0.04 ha) and harvested 35-40 kg of crop. He kept some seeds for the following year, used a part for subsistence and sold the rest through participating in trade fairs earning a cash income of INR 3,000. Having seen the benefits, Singh further increased the area under kidney beans this year, and is expecting even higher production.

Authors:
Uma Partap, Tashi Dorji and Rajan Kotru from ICIMOD

Jagadish Kandpal, Girish Joshi, Pankaj Tewari and Pushkin Phartiyal from CHEA

Stay current

Stay up to date on what’s happening around the HKH with our most recent publications and find out how you can help by subscribing to our mailing list.

Sign Up

Related Content

Continue exploring this topic

14 Jun 2016 News
World Environment Day 2016

The WED 2016 campaign aims to raise awareness of the far-reaching nature of wildlife crime. The slogan for this year’s ...

12 Jul 2016 Atmosphere Initiative
Dispelling Air Pollution Myths in Kathmandu

People in the region have taken a great interest in air pollution. The risks of air pollution affecting people may ...

14 Dec 2015 News
REDD+ updates

  ICIMOD’s REDD+ Initiative organized a Regional Learning Workshop on ‘Demystifying REDD+ Safeguards for South Asia’ from 2–6 November 2015 in Kolkata, India. ...

13 Apr 2021 KSL
Experts highlight women traders’ vulnerability to COVID-19, other stressors

Women traders in the Hindu Kush Himalaya face many constraints and the COVID-19 pandemic has severely disrupted their economic activities. ...

River basin approach demands coordination among multidisciplinary agencies: interview with Prem Paudel, Chief of the Planning Section, DSCWM

Prem Paudel is Chief of the Planning Section, Department of Soil Conservation and Watershed Management, Ministry of ...

ICIMOD makes available more datasets for download

Hindu Kush Karakoram Pamir Landscape (HKPL) Birds Species of Wakhan Corridor Birds Species of Wakhan and Big Pamir Vegetation ...

11 May 2017 Himalica
Joint Monitoring of Himalica Pilot Project in Tsirang, Bhutan

During the visit, the joint monitoring team interacted with goat and vegetable value chain groups formed by Himalica and a ...