The Ministry of Agriculture and Land Reclamation of Egypt is a ministerial body in charge of
agriculture and
land reclamation in
Egypt.
History
The Ministry of Agriculture was established on 20 November 1913. In 1996, it was renamed Ministry of Agriculture and Land Reclamation. One of its goals is to address sustainability in agriculture such as better ways to do agricultural irrigation.[2][3]
In 2016, an agency from Switzerland was put in charge of inspecting Egypt's imported wheat. Egypt imports the most wheat of any country[4][5] and around 40% of the average Egyptians' income is spent on food.[6]
Farmland
As of 2000, small farms (between 5 and 6
feddans) accounted for most (49.61%) of the agricultural land ownership in Egypt. 34.72% of farm holdings were of 1 feddan or less.[7] The hope is that with desalination plants, new wells[8] and better infrastructure farmers will be able to grow more wheat.
In April 2018 Egypt purchased wheat from local farmers but not at a price farmers found sustainable.[9]
Land reclamation
A land reclamation project began in 2015, near the town of
Farafra.[8] Large government and private investment and initiatives in farming the
Sahara Desert have sometimes ended with little to show.[10]
In June 2017, it was announced 1.7 million
feddans had been reclaimed and according to the Egyptian Prime Minister,
Sherif Ismail, this work would continue. It was President
Abdel Fattah el-Sisi who, in May 2017, asked for the armed services to begin reclaiming land by demolishing illegally erected structures on land not owned by builders or
squatters.[11]