The missing link in Nepal’s electric mobility push
Nepal is in the middle of an important shift in its mobility landscape. Over the past few years, the rise of electric vehicles has been unmistakable. Anyone who walks through the streets of Kathmandu today will notice the growing number of e-scooters weaving through traffic, electric microbuses beginning to serve busy routes, and an increasing curiosity among customers about EV cars. This change is not just a passing trend, it is backed by numbers. According to the Department of Transportation, Nepal imported more than 18,000 electric two-wheelers and around 3,000 electric cars in the fiscal year 2023/24. This represents an astonishing 223 percent jump, driven largely by government tax incentives. With fuel prices constantly rising and people becoming more conscious about long-term costs, EVs today feel like the more sensible choice for many Nepalese.
However, while we celebrate this transition, we are overlooking a crucial piece of the puzzle, what happens to the batteries that power these vehicles. The conversation in Nepal has focused heavily on promoting EV adoption, reducing fuel dependency, and encouraging clean mobility. However, very little attention has been paid to the lifecycle of EV batteries—how long they last, how they should be maintained, and what to do with them once they can no longer power a vehicle. If Nepal continues to expand its EV market without addressing battery management, the country may face a serious environmental and economic challenge in the years ahead.
EV battery management essentially covers the entire journey of the battery, from the moment it enters the country to the time it reaches the end of its life. Most EVs in Nepal use lithium-ion batteries, which generally last six to ten years depending on how the vehicle is charged, the local climate, and daily driving patterns. Managing this lifecycle properly brings several benefits. Batteries last longer, the risk of fire decreases, consumers spend less on replacements, and the country reduces the need for expensive imports. It also opens doors for new industries such as battery refurbishing, testing labs, and recycling units. Countries like China, South Korea and several European nations have already invested heavily in creating a circular battery ecosystem. Nepal, however, is just beginning to recognize the importance of this issue.
The growth of EVs in Nepal is encouraging, but it also means thousands of batteries will reach the end of their life in the coming years. This raises several concerns. Nepal still does not have a formal lithium-ion battery recycling plant. Most used batteries either end up in landfills, are sold to informal scrap collectors, or sit for months in a car service center (workshop) because no one is quite sure how to dispose of them safely. When chemicals like lithium, cobalt and nickel mix with regular waste, they pose a serious threat to soil and groundwater. The lack of a proper disposal mechanism is a looming environmental risk that needs immediate attention.
Another concern is the absence of strong quality standards for battery imports. Many importers simply rely on foreign suppliers without a national system to test battery capacity, cycle life, thermal performance or the reliability of the Battery Management System (BMS). As a result, some customers report battery degradation within just two to three years. Low-grade imports with weak BMS units also increase the likelihood of overheating and fire incidents, this is an issue several EV dealers have quietly acknowledged.
Consumer awareness is another major gap. Based on conversations with EV dealers across Nepal, nearly 60 percent of battery failures are linked to how users handle their vehicles. Overcharging, storing EVs in extreme temperatures, frequent fast charging, and driving in hilly terrains without understanding battery limitations are just a few examples. Most customers buy an EV because of fuel savings but are rarely educated on battery behaviour, which is the heart of the vehicle.
The after-sales ecosystem is also not strong enough yet. Battery replacement remains expensive and often becomes a deciding factor for customers considering an EV. A 3 kWh scooter battery costs between NPR 90,000 and 140,000, while car batteries can exceed NPR 15 lakh. Without local refurbishment centres, consumers have no option but to import new packs, increasing both the cost and the country’s dependency on foreign suppliers.
If Nepal continues adopting EVs at the current pace, it could generate nearly 25,000 tonnes of used lithium-ion battery waste by 2032. If the country does not prepare today, this waste could turn into a major environmental and public health crisis. Fire hazards in scrapyards, contamination from heavy metals, and loss of valuable minerals that could have been recycled are all realistic risks. Nepal promotes clean mobility internationally, but without proper battery waste management, this green transition may unintentionally create its own set of problems.
The good news is that Nepal still has time to act. A national battery management framework could guide the country in the right direction. The first step is to introduce a national battery policy that sets minimum import standards, mandates safety certifications, and establishes clear rules for end-of-life handling. Countries like India have adopted an Extended Producer Responsibility model where manufacturers are required to take back old batteries. Nepal can adopt a similar approach to ensure accountability throughout the supply chain.Secondly, the country should build recycling and refurbishment facilities. Developing units in industrial areas such as Hetauda, Birgunj or Butwal through a public-private partnership model could create jobs, recover valuable minerals, and reduce environmental impact. Until Nepal becomes fully capable of processing lithium-ion waste locally, the government can collaborate with India or China to send recyclable materials for processing under bilateral arrangements.
There is also significant potential in second-life battery applications. When an EV battery drops below 70–80 percent capacity, it may not be suitable for vehicles but still works well for stationary energy storage. These used batteries can support solar systems, micro-hydro plants, telecom towers, and even backup power for schools and hospitals in rural areas. For many remote communities, repurposed batteries may become a more affordable and sustainable alternative to traditional lead-acid systems.
To support these efforts, Nepal must build technical capacity. With EVs growing each year, the country will need more than 5,000 technicians trained specifically in battery diagnostics, thermal management, safe handling, transportation, and refurbishment. Institutions like CTEVT and other training centres can introduce specialized programmes to develop the required workforce. A strong technical base will reduce failures and give consumers more confidence in EV technology.
Finally, Nepal should introduce a digital battery registry where every EV battery receives a unique identification number linked to a national database. This system can track battery health, ownership, repair history, and whether the battery was recycled properly. It would also help prevent counterfeit batteries from entering the market and ensure greater transparency.
Nepal’s electric mobility movement is inspiring, but the country must focus on battery management if it wants this transformation to be truly sustainable. Acting now will help Nepal avoid an environmental crisis while unlocking new economic opportunities in the circular battery economy. Battery management is not just a technical requirement; however, it is a national necessity. With the right planning and collaboration, Nepal can ensure that its EV revolution remains clean, responsible, and long-lasting.
Mental health in Nepal: Cultural beliefs, stigma, and social silence
Mental health is recognized by the World Health Organization (WHO) as a vital element of overall well-being, encompassing emotional, psychological, and social aspects that determine how individuals think, feel, and act throughout their lives. According to the Center for Disease Control, it is not just about the absence of a mental health condition, but it is also about the presence of well-being and the ability to thrive.
WHO warns that globally, mental health issues are emerging as leading causes of disability and poor quality of life, with approximately one in seven people living with mental disorders each year. Mental health has increasingly emerged as a critical public health challenge in Nepal. A combination of high prevalence of mental disorders, limited access to services, and persistent social determinants has created a significant treatment gap that undermines individual well-being, productivity, and overall national development.
According to a 2023 analysis, approximately 3.9m Nepalis were estimated to be living with at least one mental disorder in 2019. This translates into a marked rise in the burden of mental disorders over the past three decades: the proportion of disability-adjusted life-years (DALYs) attributable to mental disorders in Nepal has nearly tripled from 1990 to 2019.
A nationally representative study published in 2016 shows that among Nepali adults (aged 18–65), both anxiety and depression are “very highly prevalent” and often comorbid. Per a 2024–2025 study of over 12,000 individuals found gender disparities, women had significantly higher point-prevalence of anxiety (21.9 percent vs 11.3 percent) and depression (5.4 percent vs 1.7 percent) than men in Nepal.
Social dimension
A study found that social determinants significantly influence mental health outcomes in Nepal. Poverty, unemployment, early marriage, gender-based violence, and caste-based discrimination contribute to chronic stress and reduced well-being, especially among women and marginalized communities. Labor migration, involving nearly four million Nepalis working abroad, often leads to family separation, loneliness, and emotional strain among both migrants and those left behind.
Women are particularly vulnerable due to restrictive social norms, financial dependency, limited autonomy, and the stigma associated with disclosing emotional distress or seeking care. Youth populations face rising mental health issues driven by academic pressure, unemployment, and social media-related stress, yet few youth-centered services exist.
Kohrt & Harper (2008) argue that stigma continues to be one of the most pervasive barriers to mental health care in Nepal. Strong cultural norms that attribute mental illness to “karma,” spirit possession, or personal weakness reinforce labeling, shame, and social exclusion. Those experiencing mental health problems are often called “paagal” (mad), a term that carries deep social stigma and undermines one’s dignity, identity, and social value. Such stigma not only discourages individuals from seeking care but also results in discrimination within families, workplaces, and communities.
A study by Luitel et. al (2017) demonstrates that stigma is among the top structural barriers preventing individuals from accessing mental health services in Nepal. Conversely, upholding human dignity requires dismantling mental health stigma, recognizing individuals with mental health conditions as possessing equal inherent worth, protecting their agency in health decision-making, and creating the material and social conditions in which they can exercise substantive freedoms and participate fully in community and family life.
Cultural beliefs, stigma, and social silence
Cultural beliefs and social norms play a decisive role in shaping how mental health is understood, discussed, and responded to in many societies. Across the world, stigma often arises when mental illness is interpreted through moral, spiritual, or supernatural lenses rather than as a legitimate health condition. Such interpretations can influence whether individuals seek treatment, how communities treat people experiencing psychological distress, and whether families disclose mental-health problems or hide them due to fear of judgment. In contexts where collective identity and social harmony are highly valued, stigma can deepen because mental illness is seen not only as an individual issue but as something that threatens family reputation or social standing.
Cultural beliefs and social norms in Nepal play a powerful role in shaping how mental health is understood, interpreted, and treated. These beliefs influence not only how individuals experience psychological distress but also how families and communities respond to such conditions. It is evident that in many parts of Nepal, mental illnesses are not viewed primarily as biomedical conditions but are instead interpreted through religious, spiritual, and moral frameworks. These culturally embedded interpretations often reinforce stigma and undermine human dignity.
Traditional beliefs such as spirit possession, witchcraft, and the influence of supernatural forces remain common explanations for mental distress. Kohrt & Harper (2008) see many communities attribute symptoms of psychosis, depression, or schizophrenia to spirits being displeased. Such interpretations often lead families to seek help first from traditional healers including dhami-jhankri, lama, or tantric practitioners rather than mental health professionals and sharing to peers. While these healers provide culturally meaningful support, delays in receiving clinical care can worsen individuals’ conditions and reinforce the idea that mental illness is anomalous or spiritually polluted.
Beliefs in karma that a person’s suffering results from past sins or moral failings further moralize mental health conditions and contribute to blaming the individual.
Stigma is deeply intertwined with the cultural lexicon. Individuals experiencing mental health issues are often labeled as “paagal” (mad), “sano dimag” (small-minded), “nasamjhine” (irrational), or “kamjor” (weak). These labels carry strong social judgment, implying unpredictability, incompetence, or danger. The use of such derogatory terms reflects a social narrative that reduces a person’s identity to their mental condition, directly undermining their autonomy, agency, and dignity. Such labeling results in “structural violence,” where individuals are excluded from education, employment, and social participation due to perceived inferiority.
The fear of shame (lajjā) and the desire to preserve family reputation (ijjat) further intensify stigma. Family honor remains central within Nepali society, and mental illness is often viewed as a threat to the household’s social standing. This leads many families to hide symptoms, avoid seeking help, or restrict the affected individual’s mobility. Women are disproportionately affected: because they are commonly blamed for causing disharmony, family problems, or “inviting” misfortune, their distress is seen as a personal failure rather than a health condition. In some cases, women are subjected to verbal abuse, restriction of autonomy, or even abandonment due to mental illness, reflecting highly gendered forms of stigma.
Shawon et al. (2024) studied mental health through gender aspects and found that women who express emotional suffering may be labeled as ‘overly sensitive’ or ‘weak’, while men may face stigma for failing to embody cultural expectations of strength and emotional control. In patriarchal households, women’s suffering is often minimized or dismissed as normal emotional fluctuation, linked to menstruation, pregnancy, or household stress. This silencing hinders early identification and reinforces unequal power dynamics. Because of these cultural pressures, many individuals opt for alternative healers before turning to biomedical services.
For countries like Nepal, where social stigma, poverty, foreign migration, gender inequity, and weak health systems intersect, the mental health challenge is even more urgent. The evidence reviewed in this article shows that mental health struggles in Nepal are deeply tied to vulnerability: individuals who are socially excluded, economically fragile, or culturally marginalized face disproportionate risks of distress and also bear the heaviest weight of stigma. These vulnerabilities do not exist in isolation but accumulate across family life, livelihoods, social belonging, and access to care. Understanding these dynamics is essential for promoting dignity-centered mental health interventions that respect cultural contexts while challenging harmful stereotypes.
The author is a graduate student of Global Affairs at the University of Notre Dame, USA
Congress sailing without a star
Once regarded as the trailblazer of democracy, the Nepali Congress now faces an existential crisis. With the party lurching toward a further delayed general convention and finding itself adrift in an ideological void, a troubling question has emerged. What is the Congress party actually for in modern Nepal? The current situation is not merely an organizational failure or a temporary leadership crisis but a fundamental breakdown in the coherence, purpose and political relevance of the party. The Congress must urgently undertake a radical ideological clarification or face irreversible decline into historical irrelevance.
Institutional failure
The most damning indictment of the party is deceptively simple. Since its 14th General Convention in Dec 2021, the party has been required to hold its 15th convention within four years. However, as of Dec 2025, it has failed to conduct this basic organizational function. This failure cannot be taken as a minor scheduling issue but as a major failure of institutional governance and political competence. The Congress leadership fractured between the Deuba-Khadka establishment faction, and the ‘reformist’ bloc of Gagan Thapa, Bishwa Prakash Sharma and Shekhar Koirala has spent months engaged in mutual obstruction and political brinkmanship. The reasons offered are revealing in their inadequacy. “Technical and logistical reasons,” “complications in the distribution of active membership” and “improper serial numbers on membership forms.”
These excuses would be laughable if they were not so pathetic for a party that claims to represent democratic values. Even 54 percent of the elected convention delegates, well exceeding the statutory 40 percent threshold, had already submitted signatures demanding a special convention.
The central committee was legally obligated to call the convention within three months of receiving such a demand. However, the central committee meeting that began in mid-October simply extended indefinitely, with no resolution in sight. The Deuba-Khadka faction openly preferred to postpone the convention until after the general election transparently attempting to extend their own terms (for whatever reasons) and avoid accountability. Up to the point, it is no longer just institutional inefficiency but institutional paralysis. A political party that cannot organize its own internal democratic processes has forfeited the moral authority to claim democratic credentials. The Congress, which once championed the democratic revolution of the country and led the Jana Andolan movements, has become a cautionary tale in the corruption of organizational purpose by factional ambition.
Ideological incoherence
The Congress faces a more profound crisis. Ideological incoherence that borders on the farcical. The party constitution officially identifies Congress as a “social democratic” party committed to “democracy and socialism.” However, this declaration clashes with its post-1990 practice and its current political alignments. BP Koirala articulated a clear vision of democratic socialism as a middle path between capitalism and communism. Koirala explicitly rejected “unbridled consumerism” as immoral and opposed exploitation of resources as short-sighted. He believed that “only socialism could guarantee political freedom and equal economic opportunities to the people.” This was not theoretical posturing; it rather reflected a genuine philosophical commitment to combining political democracy with economic justice.
Nevertheless, after the 1990 democratic restoration, Congress governments systematically embraced neoliberal economic policies that directly contradict these founding principles. The party implemented structural adjustment programs dictated by the World Bank and IMF. State-owned enterprises were privatized. Trade was liberalized. Import restrictions were eliminated. The Industrial Policy of 1992 and subsequent Foreign Direct Investment policies actively promoted private sector dominance. By the 2000s, Congress was overseeing an economy increasingly shaped by finance-led growth, import dependence and widening inequality; developments that marked a departure from the socialist vision. This contradiction might have been tolerable if Congress had at least articulated a coherent new ideology.
Perhaps Congress could have honestly declared itself a social democrat in the Scandinavian sense supporting capitalism with robust welfare provisions. Or perhaps it could have embraced liberal democracy while accepting market economics. But Congress did neither. It clung verbally to “democratic socialism” while practicing almost liberalism creating a credibility chasm between principle and practice. By 2025, this incoherence reached absurdity. Congress partnered with communist parties—first the Maoists then the CPN-UML—to form coalition governments. The party whose founder rejected communism as an improper path to justice governed alongside self-identified Marxists. The party that privately embraced capitalism after 1990 publicly claims socialist credentials while their communist coalition partners theoretically pursue socialist transformation.
The finance minister and other key economic policymakers navigate between fundamentally incompatible ideological frameworks with no coherent government economic policy to guide them. This intellectual dishonesty is staggering. How can a party claiming to be a social-democratic partner with communist parties while also being the practical architect of 35 years of almost neoliberal restructuring? How can Congress credibly advocate for any economic vision when its actual practice contradicts its stated ideology, which contradicts its communist coalition partners’ stated ideology? The answer is: it cannot. This is not flexibility or pragmatism. This is ideological bankruptcy masquerading as coalition management.
The rise of alternatives
Perhaps most alarming for Congress is the emergence of political alternatives that have started to offer clearer ideological positioning. The Rastriya Swatantra Party (RSP) has now crystallized as a new centrist liberal force that explicitly commits to “a liberal economy with social justice.” RSP leader Rabi Lamichhane and Kathmandu Mayor Balendra Shah have just announced a “Grand Unity” agreement pledging to implement deep reforms and transform Nepal into a “respectable middle-income country within the next decade” through merit-based governance and youth-led renewal. Even though a broad interpretative commentary on this understanding is necessary and on the RSP itself, for now this represents a direct challenge to Congress’s political space, and it has already challenged the Congress with a growing number of its members and even prominent figures choosing RSP as an alternative.
If voters are seeking a centrist, market-oriented party with democratic credentials, RSP now offers this without the baggage of years of contradictions. If voters are seeking reform and anti-corruption politics, RSP, despite its challenges, projects youth and renewal. Meanwhile, Congress remains trapped in aging factional disputes between Deuba, Koirala and Thapa, with no fresh ideas or new generation breaking through. By this I do not mean to portray that RSP is the one that will replace Nepali Congress ideologically but it may in terms of the voter base reflecting the liberal views.
In India, the Congress party similarly lost its historic centrist space to the BJP on the right and to regional parties on the left. Nepali Congress faces an equivalent threat. The very political niche Congress once dominated, that is democracy, developmental capitalism, and secular nationalism is being colonized by newer parties that do not carry the baggage of neoliberal failure and communist coalition compromises.
A party at a dead end?
Congress has precisely one political lifeline remaining: radical ideological clarification undertaken immediately and with brutal honesty. The party cannot continue claiming to be both capitalist and socialist, both anti-communist and communist allies, both market-liberal and social democratic. Nevertheless, Nepali Congress remains indispensable to the long-term political and economic fabric of the country against the radical newcomers. This moment might even position Congress to lead through another defining crisis of battling the new danger of populism increasingly portrayed by newer parties whose charismatic appeals mask factionalism and untested governance, who are the textbook example of ‘simulacra and hyperreality’.
Congress must make three not-so-difficult choices.
Institutional renewal: Congress must conduct its delayed general convention with full transparency and embrace the GenZ-driven demand for new leadership. The party should commit to term limits, merit-based advancement and ideological clarity rather than factional rotation between aging elites.
Ideological declaration: Congress must publicly acknowledge that post-1990 liberalism either succeeded or failed as a development strategy. If it succeeded, Congress should rebrand as an explicitly market liberal party committed to capitalism with welfare provisions essentially the Indian Congress model embracing “inclusive capitalism.” If it failed, Congress should articulate what economic vision should replace 35 years of liberalization. This honest accounting is a prerequisite to political credibility.
Coalition coherence: Governing with Marxist-Leninists while trying to implement liberal policies is not pragmatism-it is a political fraud. Either Congress should unite with socialist parties around a genuine social agenda or it should form centrist-liberal coalitions. The current arrangement deceives everyone.
The clock is running
The party that led multiple democratic revolutions, that resisted dictatorship, that articulated a vision of democratic socialism suited to Nepali aspirations now risks becoming a historical artifact, a museum piece of failed leadership and ideological cowardice. The window for renewal remains open, but barely. RSP has increasingly captured the initiative for reformminded politics.
Communist parties command the left. Congress occupies an increasingly narrow and indefensible middle ground. If Congress does not urgently undertake radical ideological reconstruction, conduct genuine democratic renewal and offer voters a coherent vision of Nepali economic future, then the party will not simply lose elections. It will lose its reason for existing.
The founding generation of the party sacrificed imprisonment, exile and health to establish democracy in Nepal. The current generation owes it to them and to the future to answer honestly.
What is Congress up for in 2026 and beyond?
Until that question is answered with clarity, unity and humility, the decline will continue not as a dramatic collapse, but as a slow fade into irrelevance. And that may be the cruellest fate of all: not to be defeated, but to be forgotten leaving the nation ever more vulnerable to the populist chaos.
Defending the bench while demanding reform
The growing trend of using social media to attack courts, judges and, to some extent, legal professionals through personal abuse, ridicule and targeted humiliation is deeply troubling. Such conduct corrodes public discourse, undermines respect for institutions and risks normalizing intimidation as a form of expression. There is no justification for criminal, obscene or socially degrading speech aimed at individuals discharging constitutional responsibilities. This phenomenon deserves clear condemnation.
Yet condemning toxic expressions alone is not enough. A more uncomfortable but necessary question must also be asked: has the failure to openly and timely address the distortions, inconsistencies and internal weaknesses within the judiciary and the legal profession itself created fertile ground for this outburst of resentment on social media?
For years, concerns about the judiciary have circulated quietly—sometimes in academic circles, sometimes in private conversations among lawyers, journalists and citizens. These concerns range from opaque and non-transparent appointments to questions about intellectual rigor, professional competence, ethical consistency and accountability of some judges and legal actors. There are also deeper anxieties about institutional culture: delays in justice, selective urgency, perceived influence of power and proximity, and an erosion of public confidence in fairness. When such issues are repeatedly brushed aside, minimized or metaphorically swept under the carpet, frustration does not disappear—it mutates.
Social media, with all its flaws, has become the outlet for that mutation.
It is important to be clear: abuse is not critique. Personal attacks are not reform. Threats and insults do not strengthen democracy. But neither does enforced silence. When legitimate debate about institutional shortcomings is discouraged, delegitimized or branded as contempt, the space for reasoned criticism shrinks. What rushes in to fill that vacuum is often anger—raw, unstructured, and destructive.
This is not unique to the judiciary, nor to Nepal. Across democracies, institutions that resist introspection tend to lose moral authority. Respect cannot be demanded indefinitely; it must be renewed through performance, integrity and openness to scrutiny. The judiciary, precisely because it wields immense power over liberty, property and rights, must be held to the highest standards—not only by law, but by public expectation.
A mature democracy distinguishes between malicious attacks and principled criticism. It protects judges from intimidation while allowing citizens to question systems, decisions and processes. It understands that reverence without accountability breeds stagnation, while criticism without responsibility breeds chaos. The challenge lies in holding both truths at once.
Continuous review, honest self-critique and institutional reform are not threats to judicial independence; they are its foundations. A judiciary that welcomes evaluation—of appointment procedures, training standards, ethical enforcement and transparency—signals confidence, not weakness. Conversely, one that appears defensive or closed risks alienating the very public whose trust it requires to function.
Legal professionals, too, must look inward. The bar is not merely a defender of the bench; it is a bridge between law and society. When lawyers dismiss public concerns outright or circle wagons without addressing substance, they inadvertently deepen the credibility gap. Reform is not betrayal; it is responsibility.
Social media excesses must be checked through law, norms and collective ethics. But reform cannot begin with censorship alone. It must begin with acknowledgement: that there are unresolved issues within the justice system, that some criticisms—when stripped of their abusive packaging—point to real grievances, and that postponing reform only amplifies discontent.
A capable, dignified and trustworthy judiciary does not emerge from denial. It takes shape through constant reflection, principled criticism, and a willingness to correct course. If we truly seek to restore respect for the courts, the answer lies not in silencing voices, but in strengthening institutions—so that criticism becomes measured, trust becomes earned and justice becomes visibly, consistently fair.
Only through sustained review, reform and openness can an ignored ideal be transformed into a living, credible justice system—one that commands respect not by fear or distance, but by integrity and performance.


