sábado, 20 de junho de 2026

The Sahara Desert is Algeria's future breadbasket



mpr21 
26 January 2025

Until recently, agriculture in the Sahara Desert was confined to oases. This traditional farming owed its success to ancestral knowledge developed in the shade of palm trees.

Since the 1980s, it has been practiced in vast desert areas using sprinklers that allow for the irrigation of fields up to 40 hectares. To achieve this, Saharan agriculture faces enormous challenges: water availability, high temperatures, distance from consumer markets, energy costs, and financing.

Thanks to the southern climate, markets are now supplied year-round with tomatoes, peppers, zucchini, and other vegetables. This type of activity has attracted farmers from the north of the country and young people seeking employment. Investors like the Souakri Group have launched projects to produce cherry tomatoes on a large scale for export to Europe.

Among the successes of Saharan agriculture, potato production in the Oued Souf region, in the far southeast of Algeria, holds a special place. Initially an experiment, the development of one-hectare sprinkler irrigation systems has allowed for its expansion thanks to the participation of farmers with limited resources.

Today, the desert produces a large proportion of the potatoes consumed in Algeria. In February 2022, agricultural services estimated a potato production of 400,000 tons in Oued Souf.

The development of greenhouse horticulture is another aspect of the new desert farming that is rapidly expanding. In 2016, in the Biskra region, the total value of crop loans granted to farmers by seed traders was estimated at 530 million dinars, and the El Ghrous market in Biskra alone is frequented by more than 500 farmers and 120 wholesalers.

Sugar beet production in an arid zone

One of the successes of large-scale cultivation is the production of animal feed. With the production of maize to feed livestock, the Menia region has enabled Ghardaia to become a dairy hub.

Algeria has begun to rely on the Sahara to produce much of its milk. Last year, a project was launched to create a giant farm with 270,000 cows—the largest in the world—in the Adrar region.

The investment amounts to $3.5 billion to produce powdered milk, animal feed, meat, and grains. The money comes from both Algeria and the Qatari Baladna Group.

The same is true for wheat cultivation in Adrar, Menia, and Timimoun, in which the Italian BF Group is participating alongside the National Investment Fund with $400 million. Production reaches more than two million tons, including seeds used in cases of drought in the north. 

Sugarcane: From the Tropics to the Desert

Another project involves producing sugar from sugar beets and sugarcane in the desert. Sugarcane is already being cultivated in the south by small-scale farmers who sell sugarcane honey. There is also an Italian-Algerian sugarcane cultivation project in the Hassi El Gara region of Menia.

Regarding sugar beets, a private investor conducted initial trials in 2022 on several dozen hectares in Gassi Touil (Ouargla).

An Algerian private company will also produce sugar beets and operate a processing plant with a capacity of 500,000 tons per year in the provinces of Menia, Ouargla, and Ghardaia, covering a total area of ​​over 285,000 hectares.

Meanwhile, a state-owned company will produce sugar beets and processing beets, with a capacity of 60,000 tons, in the provinces of Ouargla and Touggourt, covering an area of ​​more than 20,000 hectares.

Sugar production in arid regions is not new. With the Canal sugar refinery, located 250 kilometers south of Cairo, Egypt is developing irrigated sugar beet cultivation. The country has extensive experience in agronomy and logistics.


Source: https://mpr21.info/el-desierto-del-sahara-es-la-futura-despensa-de-argelia/


Nenhum comentário: