Agriculture in Libya

Agriculture in Libya

Although agriculture is the second-largest sector in the economy, Libya depends on imports in most foods. Climatic conditions and poor soils limit farm output, and domestic food production meets about 25% of demand. Domestic conditions limit output, while income and population growth have increased food consumption. Because of low rainfall, agricultural projects like the Al Khufrah Oasis rely on underground water sources. Libya's primary agricultural water source remains the Great Manmade River (GMMR), but significant resources are being invested in desalinization research to meet growing demand. Libyan agricultural projects and policies are overseen by a General Inspector; there is no Ministry of Agriculture, "per se". ["Doing Business In LIBYA: A Country Commercial Guide for U.S. Companies", March, 2006]

History of agricultural development

Historically, Libyan agriculture has had an inverse relationship to growth in the oil industry. In 1958, agriculture supplied over 26% of GDP. Although gross agricultural production was relatively constant, increasing oil revenues resulted in declines in agriculture's share of national income. Agriculture contributed 9% of GDP in 1962, 2% in 1978, 3.5% in 1984 and 5.6% by 1997. In 1977 imported food valuations were over 37 times higher than in 1958. However, while a large part of oil wealth was spent on imported food this was not necessarily disturbing. The 1950s agricultural sector masked high poverty, low productivity and limited alternatives. Petrodollars provided urban employment, resulting in higher rural migration. In 1961-63, government loans to buy land from Italian settlers, encouraged urbanites to purchase land for recreation rather than farming, thereby inflating values and reducing production.

Agriculture since 1962

Since 1962 agriculture has received more attention. The government began providing inducements for absentee landlords to encourage productive land use and initiated agricultural wage policies. Agricultural was the cornerstone of the 1981-85 development plan, attaching high priority to funding the GMMR project, designed to bring water from aquifers in Sarir and Al Kufrah. In 1981, the National Libyan Agricultural Bank provided agricultural credit totaling almost 10,000 loans averaging nearly LD1,500 each. This may explain why many Libyans (nearly 20% of the labor force in 1984) remained in the agricultural sector. By 1997, about 17% of the labor force worked in agriculture.

In 1984, Libya imported over 1 million mt of cereals (up from 612,000 mt in 1974). Also in 1984, the average index of food production per capita indicated a 6% decline from 1974 to 1976. Through the 1980s about 70% of Libya's food needs were imported. By 1998, cereal production was 207,000 mt and met only 15% of the country's needs. [National Economies Encyclopedia: Libya Agriculture]

Land use and irrigation

The total area of Libya is estimated at 1,760,000 km². Area suitable for cultivation approximates 22,000 km² of which 2,390 km² dedicated to irrigated agriculture, 15,500 km² to rain fedfarming, and 140,000 km² of forest and range lands. ["Food Self-Sufficiency and Agricultural Research in Libya". Taher Azzabi, Agricultural Research Center, Tripoli (Libya)] Under 2% of the land is arable and about 4% is suitable for grazing livestock. Most arable land is in the Jebel Akhdar region near Benghazi, and the Jifarah Plain near Tripoli. The highest parts of Jebel Akhdar receive 400-600 mm of rain annually, and the adjacent area, north to Marj Plain, receives 200-400 mm. Central and eastern Jifarash Plain and Jabal Nafusah average 200 to 400 mm. The remaining coast and southern areas average 100-200 mm. Jifarah Plain has an underground aquifer, enabling well-driven irrigation. Between these areas is a 50 km land strip with enough scrub vegetation to support livestock. Desert dominates the south with occasional oasis cultivation at Al Kufrah, Sabha and Marzuq.

Studies from the 1970s indicated that at any given time, about one-third of total arable land remained fallow and up to 45% of farms were under 10 ha. Most farms in the Jifarah Plain were irrigated by individual wells and electric pumps, although in 1985 only about 1% of arable land was irrigated.

Since 1969, the Qaddafi government has been very concerned with land reform. After the "al-Fatah" revolution, confiscated Italian-owned farms (about 380 km²) were redistributed. The state retained some confiscated lands for state farming ventures, but overall, the government has not sought to eliminate the private sector from agriculture. In 1971, uncultivated land was declared state property. This measure targeted tribes in the Jebel Akhdar claiming large land tracts. Another law in 1977 further restricted tribal groups, emphasizing use in determining land ownership. Since 1977 families receive enough land to satisfy their personal requirements; this policy was designed to prevent large private sector farms and end using fertile "tribal" lands for grazing. Partly as a result of these policies and Islamic inheritance law, which stipulate each son receive an equal share of land upon the father's death, in 1986 farms tended to be fragmented and too small to efficiently use water. This was especially severe in the Jifarah Plain, which has been Libya's single most productive agricultural region.

Falling water tables caused by over irrigation posed a long-term ecological threat. The government recognized this in 1976, and took measures discouraging citrus and tomato cultivation, which require large water amounts. However, the steps required to save coastal water resources – i.e., irrigation regulation and land tenure reform to make it more water-efficient - conflicted with Qaddafi's concept of economic equity, which favored intensive irrigated cultivation of small plots for family use. Thus, instead of reforming harmful practices, agricultural policy since 1983 focused on pumping water to the coast from fossil reserves in the desert as part of the GMMR project.

Fishing

Although Libya has nearly 1,800 km of coastline and the second largest continental shelf in the Mediterranean, its waters are not particularly rich in plankton needed to sustain fishing waters. In 1977, Libya's fishing catch was 4,803 tons and 6,418 tons by 1981. Most fleets were located on the western coast near Tripoli. In 1979, fishing boats were estimated at 325, 13 being commercial trawlers; the rest small and medium-sized boats. There were approximately 1,000-1,200 professional fishermen by 1981. The government has encouraged fishing and attempted to stimulate demand. In 1986 a fishing port was constructed at Zuwarah, and ice plants were built at several coastal sites. Agreements for joint fishing development were signed with several countries, including Tunisia and Spain.

Sponge fishing was monopolized by Greek fishers. [For background on the Libyan fisheries sector covering pre-WWII until the late 1980s, refer to: Serbetis (1952): Asciak (1964); Laskaridis (1969); McKellar (1981); Arrundale and Curr (1989).] A tiny percentage of the harvest was obtained by Libyans using small boats and skin-diving equipment from shallow waters inshore. In 1977, the government established freshwater fish farms in several inshore locations. In 1997, the low annual catch of 34,500 mt demonstrates Libya’s still underdeveloped fisheries. Low investments in fishing boats, ports, and processing facilities are major obstacles to growth. The country has 1 major fishing port (Zlitan), 1 tuna plant, and 2 sardine factories with small processing capacities (1,000 metric tons per year each). Libya is planning to build 24 fishing ports in addition to one under construction at Marsa Zuaga. [National Economies Encyclopedia: Libya Agriculture] With a primary and secondary productive employment base of around 12,000 persons by 2006, the national fisheries sector provides a small fraction - around 1% - of the total labor force. Its estimated contribution to Agricultural GDP is negligible, standing at around 10%. ["The marine wealth sector of Libya: a development planning overview." Fisheries and Aquaculture Department]

Forestry

Libya lacks forests for commercial purposes. Although the government designated over 624 km² as woodland or forest, this land is covered in scrub and minor vegetation. During the 1960s the government began an afforestation program. An estimated 213 million seedlings were planted by 1977, 33 million being fruit trees. Most reforestation occurred in western Libya. During reforestation, scientist experimented with a petrochemical spray that is sufficiently porous to allow rain to seep through, yet sturdy enough to prevent seedlings from being blown away during sandstorms. Planting program goals included growing enough trees to meet domestic lumber needs, soil conservation and reclamation, and windbreaks for crops and settlements. [The Library of Congress Country Studies; CIA World Factbook]

tatistics

*Area:
**"total": 1,759,540 km²
**"land": 1,759,540 km²
**"water": 0 km²
*Coastline: 1,770 km
*Maritime claims:
**"territorial sea": 12 nm
**"note": Gulf of Sidra closing line - 32 degrees, 30 minutes north
**"exclusive fishing zone": convert|62|nmi|km|0
*Climate: Mediterranean along coast; dry, extreme desert interior
*Elevation extremes:
**"lowest point": Sabkhat Ghuzayyil -47 m
**"highest point": Bikku Bitti 2,267 m
*Land use:
**"arable land": 1.03%
**"permanent crops": 0.19%
**"other": 98.78% (2005)
*Irrigated land: 4,700 km² (2003)
*Geography: more than 90% of the country is desert or semidesert
*Agriculture - products: wheat, barley, olives, dates, citrus, vegetables, peanuts, soybeans; cattle

ee also

*Technofarm International
*Abu-Bakr al-Mansouri‎

Notes

References

References
*GSPLA. 1989. "Agriculture achievements in 20 years". Secretariat of Agriculture Land Reclamation and Animal Wealth .
*GSPLA. 1970. "Agriculture in Libya". Facts and Figure.
*Mohamed Al Genedal. 1978. "Agriculture in Libya". Arab Book Publishers.
*Ali Rahuma. 1993. "Cost of barley and wheat production in some state managed agricultural projects". J. Agric. Res. (In press).
*"Future of food economics in the Arab State". Vol. 4. Statistics. 1979.
*"Statistical index 1970". Ministry of Economic and Planning.
*Sassi Haraga et al. 1993. "Wheat and barley: Facts and Figures, 1968-1991". Agric. Res. Centre.

External links

* [http://www.photius.com/countries/libya/economy/libya_economy_agriculture.html Libyan Agriculture]
* [http://www.nationsencyclopedia.com/economies/Africa/Libya-AGRICULTURE.html National Economies Encyclopedia Libya]
* [http://www.fao.org/docrep/field/009/ag421e/AG421E01.htm#ref1.2 Fisheries and Aquaculture Department]


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Нужно решить контрольную?

Look at other dictionaries:

  • LIBYA — LIBYA, country in N. Africa, consisting of the regions of Tripolitania, Cyrenaica (see cyrene ), and Fezzan. Isolated finds of Jewish origin from pre Exilic Ereẓ Israel were discovered both in Cyrenaica and Tripolitania, but there is no reliable… …   Encyclopedia of Judaism

  • Libya — /lib ee euh/, n. 1. Anc. Geog. the part of N Africa W of Egypt. 2. Italian, Libia. a republic in N Africa between Tunisia and Egypt: formerly a monarchy 1951 69. 5,648,359; 679,400 sq. mi. (1,759,646 sq. km). Cap.: Tripoli. * * * Libya… …   Universalium

  • Libya — <p></p> <p></p> Introduction ::Libya <p></p> Background: <p></p> The Italians supplanted the Ottoman Turks in the area around Tripoli in 1911 and did not relinquish their hold until 1943 when… …   The World Factbook

  • Libya — Infobox Country native name = الجماهيرية العربية الليبية الشعبية الاشتراكية العظمى Al Jamāhīriyyah al ʿArabiyyah al Lībiyyah aš Šaʿbiyyah al Ištirākiyyah al ʿUẓmā conventional long name = Great Socialist People s Libyan Arab Jamahiriya common… …   Wikipedia

  • Libya —    In the 16th century, the Ottoman Turks combined Tripolitania, Cyrenaica, and Fezzan to form Libya. Two hundred years later, a Libyan dynasty established independence from Turkey. Turkish control was reestablished in 1835. By 1887, Italy had… …   Historical Dictionary of modern Italy

  • Agriculture and Food Supplies — ▪ 2007 Introduction Bird flu reached Europe and Africa, and concerns over BSE continued to disrupt trade in beef. An international vault for seeds was under construction on an Arctic island. Stocks of important food fish species were reported… …   Universalium

  • Libya — Libye Pour les articles homonymes, voir Libye (homonymie). الجماهيرية العربية الليبية الشعبية الإشتراكية العظمى (ar) …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Economy of Libya — Infobox Economy country = Libya width = 290px currency = Libyan dinar (LD) year = calendar year |organs = OPEC, Common Market for Eastern and Southern Africa |rank = NA |gdp = profit$67 billion (2005) |growth = 8.5% (2005 est.) |per capita =… …   Wikipedia

  • Outline of Libya — The following outline is provided as an overview of and topical guide to Libya: Contents 1 General reference 2 Geography of Libya 2.1 Environment of Libya 2.1.1 …   Wikipedia

  • Agricultural Bank of Libya — Libyan Agricultural Bank Type State owned Industry Banking Founded 1957 Headquarters 52, Omar El Mokhtar Street, Tripoli, Libya Products Agriculture Loans …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”