A discussion with experts from the agro-industry and agro-entrepreneurship fields organized by Executive Magazine and in partnership with Konrad-Adenauer-Stiftung. The roundtable explored development and acceleration start-up ventures, and heard the experiences of entreprenuers working in the sector.
Roundtable on food sector
A discussion with experts from the food sector organized by Executive Magazine and in partnership with Konrad-Adenauer-Stiftung. The roundtable focused on the current state of food security in Lebanon and what improvements can be made concerning the country’s path to profitable food interdependence through agricultural and agro-industrial exports.
Cholera spread: a symptom of structural failures
Lebanon has been cholera-free since 1993. On October 6, 2022, that changed when the Ministry of Public Health reported two laboratory-confirmed cholera cases in the country’s northern region. Since then, the numbers of cases and deaths have increased at an alarming rate. The current situation according to the Lebanese Ministry of Public Health website on November 21 shows 20 cumulative deaths and 4,008 suspected and confirmed cases, 25 percent of which are among individuals 4 years of age and below. Cholera outbreaks are also reported in other countries in the region, including Syria and Iraq. Cholera is an acute rapidly dehydrating diarrheal infection caused by the ingestion of food or water contaminated with the bacterium Vibrio cholerae. It is strongly connected to inadequate sanitation.
Lebanon’s response to the outbreak so far has included launching the government’s emergency appeal requesting support from the international community to procure vaccines, medicines, and water test kits. The World Health Organization (WHO) secured 600,000 doses of cholera vaccine from the International Coordination Group to vaccinate all refugees and host communities aged 1 year and above. On a local level, residents received information through various media outlets on how to wash hands and mixed messages about how much chlorine to add to their water tanks.
Unfortunately, this response has been far from addressing the root causes of the epidemic. Without addressing the underlying causes of the spread of cholera – old and dilapidated water and sanitation systems, and water privatization – behavioral interventions will have limited, if any impact in stopping the epidemic. By focusing on individual-level solutions, people and communities with limited resources are made responsible for managing and controlling the outbreak, instead of state institutions and international organizations. Overcrowding, and unsanitary living conditions in jails have long been root determinants of different types of infectious outbreaks globally since the 1800s, as have refugee camps and informal settlements.
Decades of dirty water
For years, researchers have been raising the alarm about the poor water quality in Lebanon, especially in refugee settlements and impoverished areas. The country lacks a national wastewater strategy, leaving it up to local municipalities with limited resources and know-how. At the same time, rivers and lakes have been dumping grounds for industries for years. In 2021, UNICEF cautioned based on a focused study that the water situation in Lebanon is on the brink of collapse. Despite the large number of studies and consultations commissioned to resolve the water pollution in rivers, lakes and water bodies in Lebanon, very little has been achieved.
In the context of an economic crisis, political deadlock, and dwindling humanitarian funding, it is not surprising that access to clean water and sanitary services has deteriorated for a considerable portion of the population. The public sector water provides about three million people with water but considering the energy crisis, a large number of the population and one million refugees rely on alternative sources like water trucks, or private sources. This has created a fertile ground for waterborne diarrheal diseases to emerge, given that a major source of contamination is microbiological. This includes cholera. Cholera epidemics are signs of structural deficiencies; historically, cholera is an outcome of failed systems and services, which is a violation of the human right to safe water and sanitary conditions.
To mitigate cholera, we do not need innovation. Instead, we need to learn from history – that the sanitation movement was critical to improving public health – and to go back to basics. No human being, whether citizen or refugee, should be deprived of the right to clean water and a healthy environment. Promoting individual hygiene behavior change – the only public health action undertaken by the state at this point while it waited for adequate number of vaccines to arrive – will only narrowly contribute to limiting the spread of transmission. Unless the government and high-level decision-makers actively work towards urgent waste water management, upgrading the public water supplies in Lebanon, the cholera outbreak will not be contained.
However, there is nothing so far in the government discourse which is showing any commitment to work on the systemic failings. We call on the government, municipalities, and United Nations’ agencies to direct urgent resources to water treatment plants and utilize the expertise already available in academic institutions to provide environmentally sound solutions, and prevent future outbreaks of other types of waterborne diseases. Improved water supply interventions alongside a focused cholera vaccination program are proven to be more likely to yield favorable public health outcomes than just a vaccination program alone.
Ashrafieh reaching higher
A study recently conducted by Al Iktisad Wal Aamal magazine on real estate projects in the Achrafieh area of Beirut showed that there are currently 91 projects under construction, of which 88 are residential buildings. These add up to 1,366 floors, and 1,988 apartments with an overall area of 804,452 square meters. The selling value of the projects amounted to more than $2.8 billion, said the study, with numbers being supplied by developers of the projects. Some 47 percent of the developments are located in the areas of Sioufi, Hotel Dieu, Sodeco, and Nasrah. More than 25 percent are located in Sassine, Mar Mtr, and Fern el Hayek, while 16.5 percent are in Al Rmel, Modawar, Jeitawi, and Karm el Zaytoun. The remaining 11 percent are located in St. Nicolas, Al Saifi, Tabaris, and Sursock. Only six projects have been completed and handed over while most of the others are to be completed in 2010 and 2011. Apartments of less than 250 square meters constitute 46.1 percent of the total, while those between 250 and 350 square meters constituted 33 percent. The remainder is divided into apartments between 351 and 450 square meters (11 percent) and over 450 square meters (9.9 percent). As for the prices, information supplied by owners and developers said that prices range between $1,800 and $9,000 per square meter. Apartments priced at less than $2,000 per square meter constituted only 3.7 percent of the total, while 42 percent of apartments were priced between $2,000 and $2,999 per square meter. Some 24 percent of units were priced between $3,000 and $3,999 per square meter, 23 percent between $4,000 and $4,999 and the rest over $5,000 per square meter (5 percent). As of January, 1,224 of the 1,988 apartments were sold (62 percent) with an approximate value of $1.6 billion.
Ashrafieh reaching higher
A study recently conducted by Al Iktisad Wal Aamal magazine on real estate projects in the Achrafieh area of Beirut showed that there are currently 91 projects under construction, of which 88 are residential buildings. These add up to 1,366 floors, and 1,988 apartments with an overall area of 804,452 square meters. The selling value of the projects amounted to more than $2.8 billion, said the study, with numbers being supplied by developers of the projects. Some 47 percent of the developments are located in the areas of Sioufi, Hotel Dieu, Sodeco, and Nasrah. More than 25 percent are located in Sassine, Mar Mtr, and Fern el Hayek, while 16.5 percent are in Al Rmel, Modawar, Jeitawi, and Karm el Zaytoun. The remaining 11 percent are located in St. Nicolas, Al Saifi, Tabaris, and Sursock. Only six projects have been completed and handed over while most of the others are to be completed in 2010 and 2011. Apartments of less than 250 square meters constitute 46.1 percent of the total, while those between 250 and 350 square meters constituted 33 percent. The remainder is divided into apartments between 351 and 450 square meters (11 percent) and over 450 square meters (9.9 percent). As for the prices, information supplied by owners and developers said that prices range between $1,800 and $9,000 per square meter. Apartments priced at less than $2,000 per square meter constituted only 3.7 percent of the total, while 42 percent of apartments were priced between $2,000 and $2,999 per square meter. Some 24 percent of units were priced between $3,000 and $3,999 per square meter, 23 percent between $4,000 and $4,999 and the rest over $5,000 per square meter (5 percent). As of January, 1,224 of the 1,988 apartments were sold (62 percent) with an approximate value of $1.6 billion.
Syria’s star island
The Lebanese real estate developer Noor International Holding announced at the beginning of March that is has proposed a plan to the Syrian authorities to build a $10 billion real estate development, according to Zawya Dow Jones. The Arab Stars Islands projects will consist of two star-shaped artificial islands covering some 907,000 square meters off Syria’s Mediterranean coast. Once the license is given, the project will be completed in four years, Mohammed Saleh, the chairman of Noor International told Dow Jones. The islands will include commercial, residential, tourist and recreational complexes. Noor International proposed plans to build a Cedar Island on the Lebanese coast but so far has failed to obtain the license required to start the project.
Quality clampdown after collapse kills workers
Following the collapse of a seven-story building in Amman in the first week of March, Jordan’s Prime Minister Samir Rifai called for intensifying inspections of new construction sites to ensure safety and engineering standards are met, according to the Jordan Times. The building collapse killed five workers and injured seven. The Jordan Engineers Association (JEA) also said last month that most of the new buildings constructed in Jordan, excluding the capital, do not comply with the National Building Code. “Due to poor enforcement of the regulations by authorities and the widespread influence of favoritism, licenses are issued after the construction is complete, which is a clear violation of the rules,” Mahmoud Subhi, head of JEA’s technical affairs and engineering supervision committee told the Jordan Times. He said most buildings would not withstand possible earthquakes and stressed that municipalities should not give permits before the JEA’s approval of blueprints. He also added that even buildings constructed under The Ministry of Public Works and Housing’s “Decent Housing for Decent Living” initiative are not compliant with the building code.
US firm targets distressed assets in Gulf
The United States-based investment firm Blumberg Capital Partners announced last month the launch of a $1 billion property fund targeting distressed properties in the Gulf, the US and Brazil, according to Arabian Business. The Chief Executive Officer and founder of the company Philip Blumberg announced that a third of the fund — which has already attracted interest from local sovereign wealth funds — will be invested in the Gulf. “We’re seeing very significant interest from the Gulf region in particular. The commitments, both soft and hard, are in excess of $100 million,” the CEO announced. The firm made plans to meet with fund managers and developers in Abu Dhabi in order to discuss possible investment, while also aiming to invest in a mixed-used development in Oman, said the publication. “We’re pretty convinced there are opportunities here in the Gulf. [But] Dubai, I think hasn’t sorted itself out yet,” said the CEO. “Certainly on the residential side, there is a huge legal grey area. As an investor, it concerns me. I would clarify the legal situation importantly now, knowing that investors are the fuel, not the developers.”
Gulf sees slump in real-estate values
According to the regional real estate tracker MEED projects, the value of ongoing and announced real estate projects in the Gulf Cooperation Council has decreased by 13.7 percent year-on-year as of February 2010. The United Arab Emirates witnessed the greatest decline of 26.2 percent, with the value of projects on hold amounting to $468 billion. The second greatest decline was in Kuwait, followed by Oman, and Qatar, while only Bahrain and Saudi Arabia witnessed an increase in the value of ongoing and announced projects, by 0.2 and 3.9 percent, respectively. Despite Saudi Arabia’s increase in total project value, $53 billion worth of developments are currently on hold.
Burj holds up Armani opening
The opening of the Armani Hotel in Dubai’s Burj Khalifa, the world’s tallest building, was delayed by more than one month being rescheduled from March 18 to April 22, reported The National.
“We needed additional time to make sure everything was 100 percent perfect,” a source close to the company told the newspaper. Moreover, up until the third week of March, the observation deck at the Burj Khalifa’s 124th floor, which was closed for maintenance on February 7, was still inaccessible to visitors. The National said that no opening date for the deck has been set yet.
Agri-food industry and academia
They say Women are from Venus and Men are from Mars, but they can still manage to settle on a common ground, and carry a fruitful relationship which might last for years. Industry and academia have long been considered as living on two different planets and speaking two different languages, but what if they succeeded in setting a common language? How would they both benefit? And most importantly, how to get there?
Recently, one international beverage company with business in Lebanon decided to explore the possibility of valorizing its by-products by using them as a component for animal feed, as part of its circular economy initiative to decrease its waste disposal cost. A collaborative thesis was agreed upon, and research work started on identifying potential buyers and the nutritional input of these by-products. It went very well and the student was able to successfully defend the thesis. However, when a complementary collaboration was discussed which included production optimization, the collaboration could not move any further since there was a need for access to the production process, and the delicate data it included. Yet such information could not be divulged, so it was impossible to publish any peer reviewed papers; the university lost interest and the collaboration ceased at an early stage. Both parties had their points, the industry needed to protect its production process which is integral to its success, while the university needed to publish papers to preserve its ranking.
This is just one example of many collaborative initiatives which either were short-lived or failed to launch. Limited access to data, as illustrated in the above case, is only one of various difficulties between the collaboration, which include:
• Timing; universities have their own academic year cycle and research projects are identified usually in September at the beginning of the fall semester, but a company cannot wait if it needs quick answers for technical challenges.
• Intellectual property; for any innovated process, the technology or product is debatable between the industry and the academic institution, and sometimes the researchers themselves, which warrants a serious legal support and collaboration framework.
• Research pace; usually researchers have solidly established protocols and have the ability to accumulate knowledge over years, meaning they have a relatively slow but steady pace. For industry, solutions usually need to be developed quickly and need to be adapted even faster to market variations.
• Objectives; which can be can be contradictory for academia research to industry priorities. So while researchers could be concentrating their efforts on subjects like social responsibility, the greenhouse gas effect, and animal welfare, many companies may prioritize production cost reduction, market access, product quality, etcetera.
Time to collaborate?
Nevertheless, collaboration between universities and industry through technology or science parks started in developed countries, in 1951 with the Stanford Research Park which emerged later as part of the Silicon Valley and in 1972, Europe’s first technology parks were created with the University of Nice Sophia Antipolis in France, and Cambridge University in England. The concept has thrived since then and has become one of the major strengths of modern economies. Can it be applied it to the Lebanese agro-economic ecosystem? And is now the right time to reflect on such a collaboration?
At the end of 2019, the dramatic downward spiral of the Lebanese economic system started, with the agri-food model the fastest to fall apart, although many argue that there was no agro-food model to start with since it was based largely on import input. Access to finance became a nightmare, cultivated land decreased, food processor companies went out of business, and consumers saw their purchasing power disappear in a terrifying pace as many became largely dependent on monthly food basket support from local NGOs.
Universities were also hit hard and fast. In a record time, the value of student tuition evaporated as the Lebanese pound plummeted against the dollar, the same went for the professors’ wages, and thus a “brain drain” was triggered. For many, there was nothing to do but to reminisce on the “paradise lost”; but for others, it was the birth of a new era, where anything was possible. But first, it is important to reanalyze the effects of the multidimensional cataclysm and most importantly focus on what can be built now which was impossible before.
The disruption brought by the crisis led agri-food stakeholders to rethink their strategies, and they have since discovered that monetary depreciation could be an actual incentive to produce more price competitive products through accessing foreign markets. But price is not the only parameter to be considered, international markets need specific thresholds of quality, hygiene, packaging, and transportation conditions to be respected. In addition, investing in Research and Development departments within Lebanese agri-food small-to-medium enterprises proved impossible, so the only way to improve products to enter international markets was through access to already available facilities for specific product development. This could not have come at a better time for universities which lacked the needed funds to carry out research activities, with an added bonus to pivot research activities into more practical use with greater emphasis on development. Moreover, the large pool of experts that can be provided by universities offers an immense advantage for industries that seek solutions to their challenges without the need to hire experts on a full-time basis.
The need to collaborate between academia and industry is clear and the benefits for both parties are numerous, especially within the current crisis context. But how is it possible to initiate this collaboration and what is the needed physical and administrative infrastructure?
The first element for the success of the said collaboration is the human element and the need for actual “translators” who can play the role of mediators between academic institutions and industrial companies. These entities would base their interventions on qualified personnel from both sides who can understand the challenges and the expectations of each and provide a mediation to come up with the best collaboration framework. These “translators” would also work on adapting the mindset of both parties to more collaborative approach while at the same time preserving each party’s interests.
There is also a great need in university technology transfer offices who provide support to researcher and student in transforming their research findings into viable products or business models, and to protect them through proper intellectual property frameworks where the university, the researchers and the industry have all their part of the patents ownerships.
Initiating collaboration between academic institutions and industrial companies needs a physical framework where they can meet, exchange ideas and expertise to eventually adopt different collaboration models. This initiative is part of the Agri-Food Innovation Days organized by Berytech, a local entrepreneurial support system. Over three days, universities and industries met and exchanged ideas, challenges and solutions. This year, six grants were offered by QOOT, the Lebanese Agri-Food cluster, for final year projects in universities to provide answers to challenges faced by different members.
This collaboration could evolve to establish technology parks within university premises, which would also offer a common space for research on technological solutions to agri-food companies, as well as offering both researchers and students direct contact with companies. Through this platform agri-food companies would also have access to universities’ incubators where start-ups are being created and provide vital input, but also create investment opportunities, and perhaps eventually work with them as sub-contractors or developers.
[inlinetweet prefix=”” tweeter=”” suffix=””]The world is full of success stories where industry and academia collaborated and the opportunities currently offered by the Lebanese context are immense. [/inlinetweet]The country needs to work its way up to Agriculture 5.0 where artificial intelligence, IoT and machine learning are used in a multidisciplinary approach. This set of diverse human know-how and equipment is available in universities, and the objectives for their application are determined by industry. To my knowledge, this is a perfect combination for a long-lasting collaboration between two entities which may speak two different languages but share a common future.
Food insecurity is at the forefront of global threats and its prevalence is intensifying. An estimated 54.5 million people are severely food-insecure in the Eastern Mediterranean region as a result of the impact of the Covid-19 pandemic, according to the World Food Programme. In Lebanon, a combination of economic, political, health and social factors are deterring the country’s ability to combat hunger risks. While the financial downturn has had an exorbitant impact on the daily lives of citizens and business, the country’s existing agriculture infrastructure was already calling out for greater attention, with too much dependence on foreign aid, organizations, and United Nations (UN) agencies. The situation has become even more challenging for a country hosting approximately 1.5 million Palestinian and Syrian refugees, adding further pressure to fragile socio-economic conditions.
The UN’s Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) points out that food security encompasses four components: availability, meaning the supply of food in an area; access, including the physical and economic ability of people to obtain food; utilization, in the sense of proper consumption of food; and stability, which refers to the sustainability of food production and supply. But where does Lebanon really stand?
Agriculture: a strategic sector neglected for decades
The great famine of Mount Lebanon between 1915 and 1918 pushed policy makers at that time to add the predominantly agricultural areas of Akkar, the Bekaa Valley, and South Lebanon, over to Mount Lebanon to ensure that the latter is not susceptible to hunger again.
For agricultural engineer Hanna Mikhael, successive governments from 1992 onwards failed to address agriculture in the same context as other productive sectors, he tells Executive. “With the limited budget allocated for the Ministry of Agriculture, the sector has been adopting a “begging” policy, counting on the non-sustainable financial support of the UN’s Food and Agriculture Organization, World Bank and non-governmental organizations (NGOs) rather than on a long-term national strategy,” Mikhael says, who also co-founded Izraa, a Facebook page providing agricultural and technical advice to 139,000 members.
The losses incurred in 2020 when Lebanon’s grain silos at Beirut’s port were pulverized by a deadly blast, and the outbreak of war in Ukraine, exerted additional pressure on the country’s wheat reserves. Mikhael advocates for the decentralization of grain silos to mitigate such risks. He also requests from municipalities and religious authorities to offer the vast areas of unutilized land that they possess to increase grain production.
Agricultural economist Souhad Abou Zaki considers that increasing the local production of wheat and pulses is possible; if targeted, well-communicated, and timely subsidies are provided to give financial incentives to farmers to produce them, she tells Executive. While this would improve the local food safety status, it will not by itself ensure food sufficiency. [inlinetweet prefix=”” tweeter=”” suffix=””]According to Mikhael, the decades-long absence of an efficiently implemented agricultural strategy has exacerbated the sector’s fall amidst the crisis[/inlinetweet]: “Ironically, the Ministry of Agriculture’s NAS [National Agriculture Strategy] for 2020-2025 is a replication of the previous two strategies of which almost no achievements were recorded.”
First and foremost, the failed energy sector has been severely harming agro-industry. Long before the crisis, the sector suffered from recurrent electricity outages, and this has worsened in the last two years. “In terms of fuel, the global increase in prices combined with the rapid devaluation of the local currency and removal of subsidies led to a sharp surge from $2.64-3 per liter (at a rate of $1,507/LL1,000) in the late 1990s, to around $20-22 per liter at the exchange rate on the parallel market. This sharp increase added additional pressures on farmers and increased the cost of transportation of agricultural and food products,” Abou Zaki says. [inlinetweet prefix=”” tweeter=”” suffix=””]The irregular supply of energy places the sector at risk, given that power is a key input in all stages of agriculture, from production (equipment, machinery, water pumping), to grading, storage, packaging, transportation, and selling. [/inlinetweet]
The state of water supply and networks, which are essential for irrigation, are not much better. “The vast majority of small-scale farmers use traditional irrigation systems which leads to inefficiencies and waste,” Abou Zaki says, before adding that water pollution and contamination emanating from inadequate water pipes and sewage draining have significantly affected soil properties and quality. “Not only production losses are probable, but the productivity, quality, and safety of the locally consumed products are at risk,” she says.
Road facilities play a significant role in the improvement of agricultural production, but with the lack of proper maintenance, costs and losses certainly increase. Abou Zaki considers that the post-harvest infrastructure, practices, and management are weak and way below international standards. For instance, wholesale markets are not organized or monitored, which generates large amounts of food waste. “Adequate agricultural storage facilities are either limited or very costly to rent. A significant number of small-scale farmers and agricultural cooperatives rely on assistance from local or international NGOs to invest in infrastructure (greenhouses, machines walls, irrigation) given their inability to secure funds from their own limited profits, nonetheless this support may not be always sufficient or suitable,” she adds.
The deteriorating situation of farmers, the sector’s human capital, should not go unnoticed either. “Feed materials, grains, pesticides, fertilizers, and other agricultural inputs are purchased in US dollars while the farmers are selling in local currency, making them vulnerable to the constant currency fluctuations. To make matters worse, farmers are rarely compensated when their harvests are lost due to bad weather conditions,” Mikhael says. This requires the establishment of emergency funds for farmers and agribusinesses in the event of crop, livestock, or even physical infrastructure losses due to climate change or natural disasters, as per Abou Zaki. Besides, the rental prices of lands have surged. “Rethinking land-related laws such as ownership, land transfer, inheritance, and registration to resolve conflicts over land ownership and incentivize investment in the land and agricultural infrastructure is a major recommendation,” Abou Zaki says. These worsening conditions will not push farmers out of the sector, as most of them are occupationally immobile. But it will impact agricultural production and negatively affect the country’s food security position, according to Mikhael.
The industry sector: private initiatives ensure production viability

With the devaluation of the Lebanese pound, the Ministry of Industry’s budget has become negligible and is barely covering the institution’s operating costs, the advisor to the caretaker Industry Minister, Adib Dib tells Executive. The sector is therefore counting on foreign aid, but this is either getting reduced or suspended due to the political impasse across government. A solar energy project with the United States Agency for International Development (USAID) has not materialized and another industrial cities’ project with the UN Industrial Development Organization has been halted, he says. Besides, the road conditions have been deteriorating, with Zahle’s industrial city being a striking example of such decaying infrastructure. While the Ministry of Public Works and Transport is responsible for highways, internal roads are the municipalities’ responsibilities. But again, the accumulated revenues of the latter have lost 90 percent of their value, as per Dib. “The ministry is exerting enormous efforts to improve the infrastructure state of Lebanese factories, but it doesn’t possess a magic wand,” Dib says, before elaborating that despite protectionist policies adopted to improve local production, external local and regional conditions are creating challenges.
Nicolas Abou Faysal, President of the Association of Bekaa Industrialists, shares a more positive outlook for the industrial sector. “The rate of LL1,500 to the dollar era was an illusion and therefore our GDP was overestimated. Today, the incurred costs are real, but our production is real too,” Abou Faysal tells Executive. He expects the balance of trade deficit to gradually shrink over the next five years and says that there are no major food security risks in Lebanon. The sector is currently booming with over 15 new factories built in the last two years in Zahle, providing high-quality products which are replacing imported ones. On the infrastructure level, Abou Faysal explains that the industrialists adapted to the changing conditions by resorting to solar systems to ensure a consistent source of energy and by installing or enhancing their water purification systems. The decaying road conditions, for Abou Faysal, are not new and therefore do not constitute a factor harming production. Yet, the pan-Arab highway project signed in 2003 and not yet finalized could give a boost to local production.
To minimize corruption, especially on the customs level, Abou Faysal proposes strengthening the roles of economic attaches at Lebanese embassies abroad, by giving them the authority to verify and approve shipments being exported to Lebanon. This will reduce the risk of fraudulent customs declarations and protect local producers. The establishment of a special economic zone in Zahle, conducive to investments, is also vital to increase the number of local food production companies, Abou Faysal says. A similar plan for Tripoli was approved in 2008. The plan was finalized and the funds were secured in 2018, but the government failed to approve its development, as per a statement by Hassan Dennaoui, acting chair and general manager of the Tripoli Special Economic Zone.
Overall, and across the agricultural and industrial sectors, private initiatives and donors’ support have kept production ongoing. The latest Ease of Doing Business Index issued by the World Bank ranked Lebanon 143rd out of 190 countries, reflecting a rather weak position on many levels, including infrastructure, which can hinder much-needed investments. If no strategies are put in place, Lebanon’s competitiveness will be further weakened, at a time when the global economy’s future is looking mixed to say the least.
In light of Lebanon’s context and current difficulties, food security should focus on the ongoing availability, affordability, and accessibility of nutritious food products that satisfy the dietary needs of every Lebanese. Furthermore, the Lebanese agrifood industry must be developed to promote competitive exports, value-added activities, employment opportunities, and the expansion of Lebanon’s total food system in order to attain self-sufficiency.
Lebanon lacks quality products, modern agricultural practices, proper safety standards, traceability and a reliable certification system, limiting its agricultural potential on the national level, as well as its export potential and its integration into global value chains. Lebanon can be considered self-sufficient when it comes to fruits, vegetables, and wine; however, the country remains highly import dependent, importing more than 80 percent of its food needs. This pattern of behavior causes the country to be highly susceptible to shocks. Agricultural inputs (such as irrigation equipment, seeds, pesticides and fertilizers) are primarily imported, and have all witnessed price hikes, making it more difficult for small-scale farmers to obtain these inputs, and forcing the majority to replace them with agricultural inputs of lesser quality, possibly leading to poorer yields and lower revenue, as per findings from Scaling-up Agri-Food Innovations, a project implemented by USAID to reduce the agricultural sector’s import dependency.
Animal feed is also imported, and is essential for the dairy and poultry industries. According to the World Bank, 1.7 million Lebanese are estimated to have fallen under the poverty line, with 841,000 of those under the food poverty line, as noted during the period between 2019 to 2021. However, food insecurity is more prominent in some regions than others, with the North governorate reporting the highest percentage of 27 percent compared to the Mount Lebanon governorate with 16 percent, as per the United Nations’s OCHR 2021 Emergency Response Plan for Lebanon.
A clear strategy is overdue
Achieving full self-sufficiency seems overly ambitious; however, this does not mean that Lebanon’s local agri-food sector cannot contribute to food security. First and foremost, Lebanon requires a clear strategy for its agri-food sector, one that identifies the most resilient sub-sectors and the most vulnerable sub-sectors; the most prominent challenges for every sub-sector; the most prominent challenges for agricultural water supply and availability; and the most prominent challenges limiting export of agri-food products; paving the way for complementary legislation and projects to improve overall agricultural standards, and provide farmers with the ability to improve their services for both the national and international markets. Generally, the agri-food business possesses two critical functions:
1. Promoting and maintaining food security;
2. Creating jobs and revenue within the industry.
However, the precariousness of Lebanon’s socioeconomic climate, the limited access to finance, and the undependable nature of public institutions have impaired the agri-food business’ ability to fulfill these functions. Developing an agricultural strategy necessitates a thorough examination of the interconnections between the agricultural system and the resources that support it (land, energy, water). Decisions across various resource systems are frequently made with insufficient coordination. [inlinetweet prefix=”” tweeter=”” suffix=””]The strategy must also capitalize on Lebanon’s highly skilled labor pool[/inlinetweet], as well as incorporate modern technologies and automated systems into farming operations. Foreign market demands and criteria must be evaluated in order to develop high-quality foods for these markets. Accordingly, new agricultural policies should be designed to ensure export stability, demand development for local goods and the subsequent introduction of new commodities at the local and international level.

In the short-term, food consumption patterns and food security metrics should be studied to identify important indicators such as domestic production quantities and values, domestic consumption quantities, and exports and imports for each item related to the agri-food industry. Based on these figures, strategic local production sectors, which are most likely those where Lebanon is already self-sufficient such as fruits, vegetables, and bulgur wheat, should be prioritized. Moreover, incentivizing farmers to substitute traditional crops for imported produce that is essential for food security (e.g. chickpeas, barley); or substituting crops which operate at a loss with crops containing higher input to the human diet (legumes as sources of proteins and cereals or potato as source of starch), can help limit import dependency.
Targeting the resilience factor
Investing into an agricultural stock or an agricultural infrastructure system is intensely unlike dreaming of instant financial gratification, for example by becoming a financial markets jock. Imagine being a day trader on multiple stock exchanges or feeling the hourly thrills of seeing your crypto-wallet bursting at its virtual seams with a million dollars or three, made (and lost) in speculative bets on Bitcoin, Ether, Tether, et al.
Now shudder and think about agricultural stocks, from publicly listed farming cooperatives to fertilizer and equipment multinationals. Investments can be rewarding and seem rather safe – agriculture and its distant cousin of consumer staples are among the prime defensive sectors in the terminology of stock markets – but come with agrarian risks and reward profiles. This path to prosperity is staid and slow by the nature of agriculture as a business.
The only investments guaranteed to keep your heartbeat safer from rapid increases and undue exhilaration than stock portfolios in agriculture, would be investments into agricultural infrastructure and systems. Returns of a direct investment into an agro-system are many growing and harvesting seasons away. In financial terms, neither are investments into publicly traded agricultural corporations as addictive as playing the conventional or virtual financial markets, nor are returns on direct investments into agricultural infrastructures and privately held agricultural enterprises, typically as high as those in tech and healthcare companies. At least during boom times.
Yet, the world is not living in boom times anymore, and it is a sign of these recessionary times that the value of the agro-production system and agro-food economic sector is going through the roof. Add in the importance of being able to differentiate between value and price, and while you are at it, also rethink and recalibrate your profit orientation by pricing in previously ignored, value-annihilating externalities.
Noting that the distinction between value and price has been demonstrated most impressively in Lebanon’s recent but already legendary economic and monetary crisis, you may arrive at the point of reappraising your entire framework and mindset of productive investment into the real economy in the context of agriculture and livelihoods in rural Lebanon.
An overdue development order
Against the background of global and local crises in the 2020s, the need to develop Lebanon’s agriculture-based economic ecosystem – with its incomplete and dilapidated infrastructures – is dire. Not only have public and private investments into this system over decades been too small by orders of magnitude, but new development projects also face limitations in size, economies of scale and short-term return potential, along with barriers to funding, planning and management capacities, and community acceptance. Thus, equipping rural farmers with an incentive-rich agro-food production system that will encourage them to continue producing and tending the land, while also contributing to the establishment of rural business opportunities, is a tall order indeed. Such a quest needs “time, trust, and lots of effort,” socio-economist and agricultural livelihoods expert Elias Ghadban notes.
Ghadban is involved with the design and supervision of one such development program that is currently being undertaken not by a for-profit corporation or public sector entity, but by a charitable organization, the Order of Malta in Lebanon (OML), under what resembles a public-private-community partnership, or civil society, community, and public partnership. Ghadban speaks to Executive as technical advisor and volunteer board member of an agro-humanitarian program that was initiated at the cusp of the Lebanese crisis by OML, a unit in the 900-year-old Sovereign Military Hospitaller Order of Saint John of Jerusalem, of Rhodes and of Malta.
The agro-humanitarian program of OML started with a small project that the organization initiated soon after Lebanon’s commercial banking channels were paralyzed early on in the financial and economic crisis, which brought down a system of rural credit between suppliers and farmers. Under the hitherto functioning system, farmers would obtain seedlings at planting time from commercial providers and pay for them several months later out of revenues generated from their harvests. [inlinetweet prefix=”” tweeter=”” suffix=””]The conditions during the financial crisis left farmers with the sole option to pay for seedlings with hard cash-on-hand.[/inlinetweet] In this livelihood emergency, the agro-humanitarian project endeavored to provide small-hold and part-time farmers with inputs – seedling – that had become impossible for these farmers to obtain. From this point of origin, transforming rural livelihoods has become the gist of OML’s agricultural approach.
Under its initial agro-humanitarian thrust, OML has been providing a stopgap answer to this problem through the distribution of seedlings that allowed more than 8,600 farmers to plant enough crops to secure subsistence nutrition for their families and additionally achieve some supplemental income from selling part of their crops. Five vulnerability assessments were undertaken to identify the eligible farmers. “We said that we will target the farmers that are linked to the primary healthcare center in the catchment area of each center [and], working next to the center in close collaboration, will support farmers with seedlings depending on summer or winter season, with organic matter, and irrigation systems,” Ghadban explains.

According to him and his colleague Adel Ghandour, who manages the OML agricultural services team, more than 11 million seedlings with an aggregate value of $370,000 were distributed between 2020 and the third quarter in 2022. This represents 43 percent of the target clientele of 20,000 farmers that the charity aims to reach by 2025.
The 2025 target is based on an extensive network for OML services provision which includes mobile units, supported centers, and proprietary centers. Catchment areas of services centers are extensive and provide the base for the organization’s agricultural support nodes called Services Provision Units (SPUs). Five of these units have been developed to date, out of a targeted total of seven that are to be built on 130,000 square meters (sqm) of land, according to a fact sheet provided by OML.
This distribution model, however, is not a long-term solution. “Because the context has changed, we are moving from the humanitarian distribution, to [targeting] a resilience factor where you support the farmers to continue [farming] but also create economic opportunities in rural areas,” Ghadban explains. In practical terms, this means that the agro-humanitarian project is advancing into its second and third phase, which entails further training and community development efforts. But the project is anchored by horticultural nurseries in a communal operation, and by to-be-implemented processing units for the key crops at SPUs co-located with OML operated or supported centers, found from Kobayat and Ras Baalbek in the north, to Yaroun and Rmeich in the south.
The horticultural nurseries, include a batch of operating nurseries which have to date produced over 2 million seedlings. By the first quarter of 2023, the number of nurseries will be eight, each with projected capacity of around 7 million seedlings per year. “This satisfies around 15 percent of demand, which is significant for us, because this is a pilot project,” Ghadban says. According to him, the first batch of nurseries already provides seedlings at comparable or better quality than those offered in the commercial market, at a price to farmers that is lower by 40 percent when compared with the for-profit market.
They are complemented by crop processing units with equipment for roasting freekeh, or young wheat, and presses for oils and essences. Of the processing units, a pilot freekeh facility has become operational in Yaroun. The investment budget for creation of processing units has been put at $250,000 to $300,000 per SPU and a consultative evaluation of further processing unit establishments between OML and farming stakeholders has been initiated. However, such collaborative decision making is a time-consuming undertaking, Ghadban explains. Both components in the food value chain, the nurseries on the upstream side and the processing units in the post-harvest realm, will operate on basis of a resilience principle by offering their services to farmers at break-even prices, he adds.
The fact sheet on the OML agro-humanitarian program says that it was launched in 2020, “establishing the beginning of the Association’s involvement in agriculture, after 60 years of presence in the country through its network of community health centers.” [inlinetweet prefix=”” tweeter=”” suffix=””]According to Ghadban, the program was initially devised as a small initiative under the accessibility pillar in the food security matrix [/inlinetweet]and was called agro-humanitarian because it was created in response to a humanitarian crisis in access to food in Lebanon.
From the program’s emergence early in the crisis, it is not entirely clear if OML’s venturing into agricultural system building came into existence in the form of a sound instinctual reaction to the crisis or had a strategic aim from the start, but the key to the entire project is a deep-rooted and long-planning relationship. In developing its SPUs, OML built on both its track record as an operator of primary health care centers in the services to the needy and elderly in rural communities and its partnerships with religious orders, universities and public sector entities.
OML could leverage these bonds of trust and its commitment to building rural resilience into leases for the land plots upon which the SPUs are situated. “The centers will be there for 20 years and all centers were built in partnership with monasteries or public organizations such as [the] Litani Water Authority. The [lands] were taken for free for 20-year leases based on the intention to provide services to farmers at break-even cost,” Ghadban says.
He estimates the values of the plots that were made available for free at seven to ten times the constructed SPU infrastructure, and says the depreciation of SPU assets is calculated on a ten-year horizon. However, he elaborates further that the organization’s efforts under its long-term approach and community presence would not stop if the projects in the current timeline were completed before implementation of a governmental strategy for agricultural development were to commence.
Clear strategy for the sector

Latest at this point it becomes evident that besides the above cited factors of time, trust, and effort – which in the context of tight farming communities and a cautious rural mentality can be described as core social requirements for winning acceptance – projects aspiring to long-term improvements of agricultural and rural communities will equally depend on a healthy budget, a smart plan, a functional financial and governance infrastructure, and a good organizational infrastructure. “Agriculture needs investment, I mean. [inlinetweet prefix=”” tweeter=”” suffix=””]If you don’t have [funds] to invest, agricultural growth will remain very restricted [/inlinetweet]and be limited to the people who have cash and can invest,” Ghadban acknowledges.
Asked for his estimate on the growth rates and timeframe of an agricultural renewal, he responds: “I would say that giving a time for phasing out of the crisis would be just throwing a number unless there is a clear financial system. But as someone who has worked in conflict areas,[inlinetweet prefix=”” tweeter=”” suffix=””] I cannot see a vibrant agricultural sector in Lebanon unless there is clear orientation from the government[/inlinetweet].” By his reckoning, this will not come to pass before ten years.

Source: Lebanese association of the Knights of Malta
The program’s time line illuminates a notable difference in capacity and approach between OML, as a long-term charitable organization, and the comparatively young civil society organizations in Lebanon. All functioning humans are partial to something; ergo, the agendas of success are driven by determined minorities with partisan interests. In the wake of the Syrian crisis and Arab Spring enthusiasm of the early 2010s, many international NGOs and their local units and derivative local CSOs have emerged onto the Lebanese scene, altering the composition and expanding the focuses of the historic sector of charitable, religious, and social welfare organizations that existed before the dawn of the millennium and its United Nations-determined Sustainable Development Goals.
But while often less media savvy and less outspoken on fashionable causes than their international NGO peers, who are concentrating on rights that were drawn up since the Universal Declaration of Human Rights was adopted by UN member states, the religious charities and legacy organizations of goodwill have continued to play constructive roles in care for the proverbial widows and orphans, the sick, the poor, and almost all who have been economically and socially disadvantaged and overlooked by those in power. OML stands in this deep tradition in the Lebanese space and thus is both predisposed and well positioned for the pursuit of a project that is as challenging and slow-paced as agricultural transformation and recovery of real rural economy as a conduit of stewardship and resilience.
“Strategically, agriculture as a sector will be the main sector creating jobs for economic recovery as well as for business recovery in rural areas,” Ghadban opines confidently, pointing out that by adoption a resilience point of view means that free distribution of services and seedlings has to be replaced with services that are provided on basis of break-even prices.
He says, “Looking at agriculture from a resilience point of view, means the need of addressing the challenges that have existed pre-2019 while taking into consideration the needs of post-2019, through long term approach to change rural communities and make the agricultural system more resilient and feasible.”
Infamous infrastructures
The future of farming will involve escalations of aquaculture and urban farming. These are ancient forms of food cultivation that are or can be decoupled from soil. As such, they have become increasingly viable and important in a world that has limited resources, while it is populated by billions of humans, in addition to the gazillions of micro-organisms that have always been around as the vast and silent majority of life species. Yet, from the limited perspective of the contemporary human specimen, we still associate the bulk of food production with soil-based cultivation. In this sense, one can think of land as the ultimate infrastructure of agriculture, the prefix “infra” meaning that what is beneath.
However, for our human ability to feed ourselves in the billions, rich soil that is able to guarantee subsistence to those who work it does not suffice as agricultural infrastructure (otherwise Lebanon with its soil and accommodating climate and microclimate situation would be one of the most food-secure areas on the planet). Agriculture in the 21st century involves and depends on a range of interconnected infrastructures, hard ones and soft ones, or in broad terms, on systems for the economic and sustainable production of food as physical and mental assets.
The overriding problem of agricultural infrastructure in Lebanon is the impact of the economic and social crisis in its manifestations of power cuts and water supply shortages. This combination of high cost and insufficiency in the most basic supplies is as debilitating as it is obvious for households, but it is also extremely bad for agriculture. This is because demand increases and supply bottlenecks for water, energy, and food can translate into destructive synergies where high demand for energy – a top resource needed in food production – and high demand for water, also a leading input – endanger food supplies and make food prices balloon.
High demand for food likewise can translate into price increases of water and energy, in a triangle of interdependence where agriculture and food production gobble up water and energy (according to some reports to the tune of 69 percent of global fresh water consumption and 30 percent of global energy consumption). At the same time, [inlinetweet prefix=”” tweeter=”” suffix=””]energy production requires massive water inputs, and some forms of water production are highly energy-intensive.[/inlinetweet]
Not accounting and strategizing for what is known as the Water, Energy and Food Security (WEF) Nexus exacerbates the interconnectedness of water, energy and food production and can transpire as a fateful cycle of negative interdependence. In Lebanon’s case, understanding the WEF Nexus gives us the reason why the economic shocks of power cuts and the high cost and low availability of water translate into problems with food security. And that is even without mentioning other cost boosters, such as the suboptimal means of transportation and bad roads.
Delivering food to the markets
Getting food to the people in a market economy requires logistics and the expense of transportation costs. Spiking fuel costs are reportedly responsible for more than 12 percent of product prices on supermarket shelves (see interview with the director general at the Ministry of Economy and Trade in Executive’s special report on Food Security in Lebanon). But the transportation infrastructure dilemma is not only domestic, nor is it limited to a function of the fuel price shock that was generated by the withdrawal of socially and economically detrimental fuel subsidies.
The transportation problem for export-seeking agricultural and agro-industrial producers has historically extended to underperforming export infrastructures, most notably the vital port operations. Since 2000, container terminal construction and its development under a private operator at the port of Beirut actually was improving incrementally to a level of comparatively high performance, until the 2020 catastrophe of the port blast.
Although the blast did not impact the container terminal as badly as other portions, while a partial recovery of the container handling capacity was achieved within days and expanded over the following months, the loss of capacity was immense. This relative added cost burden on exporters, many of whom are agricultural and agro-industrial producers, has actually recently been measured in the performance rankings of container ports around the world.
A comparison of the World Bank affiliated Container Port Performance Index (CPPI), which covered over 350 large, medium, and small container ports, the port of Beirut’s CPPI position in the inaugural report of 2020 was very respectable, by a metric called administrative performance that saw Beirut in 66th place worldwide. Under a second, and perhaps even more relevant metric of statistical performance, Beirut’s container terminal even ranked near the top of the world – in 11th place out of 351 measured ports.
That, however, is history. In the 2021 CPPI, which was released earlier this year and is based on performance values in the year 2020, Beirut’s position collapsed to 356 out of 370. Some ports in North America and Africa performed worse – the Los Angeles and Long Beach port pair were the worst of all container terminals due to pandemic-related disruptions; reasons for the bottom performances of several major African ports were alleged by African and international media to point towards corruption.
But the blast-hit Beirut port was the worst performing container operation in the Europe and Mediterranean region for the whole year. The CPPI ranking of Tripoli port, classified as a small operation by global throughput versus Beirut port’s medium size, also deteriorated but by a much smaller margin, slipping from positions in the 60s and 70s, to positions in the 90s.
The performance of a container port is a major influence on the cost of shipping. This means that agricultural exporters in developing countries will see their international competitive positions suffer because of bureaucratic hurdles, and worsen further if the infrastructure in their main national ports is enmeshed in corruption.
Problems of corruption and bureaucracy were obviously not the factors that devastated Beirut’s container handling performance in 2020. But one has to assume that the steep slide in performance did add to the other cost drivers that agriculture and agro-industry has had to cope with; impediments that will persist over the term of several years, even if the CPPI performance values of Beirut port in the coming years will not remain as depressed as they were in 2020.
The granular picture

In the emerging post-crisis economy of Lebanon, one can also detect improvements of agricultural infrastructures. Springing up as renewable energy installations in rural areas, these improvements appear as evidence of agriculturalists’ coping practices in the short term but more importantly, they are promising with regard to the long-term sustainability transition of the sector. Renewable energy deployment, a prime requirement under a constructive strategy for taming the WEF Nexus and a core need for better management of climate risks in the decades to come, has in the past two years not been happening under governmental master-plans. [inlinetweet prefix=”” tweeter=”” suffix=””]Renewable energy matters existed before the economic crisis, but were aborted [/inlinetweet]and for now can be judged with skepticism until they are fully and finally implemented. The overwhelming visual evidence can be seen during any excursions into rural Lebanon in the form of new solar photovoltaic (PV) installations and even the occasional wind turbine.
Moreover, renewable energy statistics by the Lebanese Center for Energy Conservation (LCEC) – a rare institution in that it has maintained a high profile of awareness building and apparent transparency – show that the increase in deployment of solar PV capacities in the past year has been the strongest in the agricultural sector, when compared to industrial, commercial, and residential sector deployments. Accounting for 17 percent of last year’s added total solar PV capacity, the agricultural sector leapt, according to the latest LCEC State of Solar report, from 10.33 to 15.57 megawatts peak.
New solar PV installations were implemented in all sectors, to an extent of an estimated increase – from the 100 megawatts that had been implemented in all of the preceding decade – by over 100 percent in 18 months from the beginning of 2021. This increase in renewable energy capacities happened with such speed because of the pressures of a vanishing state electricity supply. In the agricultural sector, informality is considered to be the highest among all economic sectors, and exceeds 80 percent. This could be interpreted as an example of the agro-sector need to replace Electricite du Liban’s power supply, which has led to renewable energy capacities being installed even beyond the measurable context of the formal economy, though not always in line with highest standards nor top efficiencies in solar electricity generation.
Such vagaries pale, however, against the certainty that in the past two years a litany of promises for an improved state supply turned out to be hot air. Public sector promises have lost every last ounce of credibility and the economic pressure of having to replace the absent supply seems here to stay, giving reason to think that decentralized renewable energy in rural economic use will grow stronger in the future. For the recklessly daring, there can be the additional hope that Lebanon, as a renewable energy republic, can achieve further dramatic improvements when utility-scale solar farms are finally realized, which would allow the impoverished population such luxuries as widespread usage of fridges and electric lighting, while simultaneously the country would be delivering on its Nationally Determined Contributions to climate risk mitigation under the United Nation’s COP framework.
While nurturing such dreams, the positive renewable energy perspective still cannot detract from the shadier reality that the problems of agro-food sector infrastructure do not end with transportation, export systems, and WEF Nexus problems that have been amplified during the past three years. There are also problems with hard infrastructures specifically for the agro-food sector. For example, deficiencies in the supply of cold storage facilities and lack of sophisticated agricultural equipment for harvesting and transporting crops at maximum levels of efficiency and quality preservation. This deficiency, according to farmers and agro-experts, impairs values of anything that is grown from bananas and citrus fruit in the lowlands, to apples and cherries that thrive, against an international comparison, at high elevations.
[inlinetweet prefix=”” tweeter=”” suffix=””]Stakeholders in the agro-food sector further testify to inefficiency, inactivity, and undersupply when it comes to testing labs and research facilities.[/inlinetweet] Likewise, on the supply end of the food value chain, seed banks and nurseries need to be developed much further. In the matter of the most needed and potentially most useful agro-industrial infrastructure, special economic zones for agro-industry or any other manufacturing industry can be spotted in the Bekaa valley. And, to name just two examples of downstream holes in the food value chain, the producers on the farms are forced to contend with a systemic lack of fair and efficient market organization, at the level of distribution and wholesale.
This entire anti-system of dysfunctional infrastructures, which in soft infrastructures also includes paucity of vocational training, lack of insurance, historical under-investment and since the economic crisis completely insufficient access to capital, is too vast and too fragmented to be the result of some powerful conspiracy. The anti-system also is far too deeply entrenched to have been produced by the economic crisis of the past three years – which, by the way, had the ambiguous function of exacerbating the woes of agriculturalists and agro-industrialists, but at the same time opening new economic opportunities to agile stakeholders in the agro-food sector.
Digging up the GDP evidence
Short-term comparisons of agricultural export data between 2019 and 2021 show strong increases when seen through the lens of an internationally funded initiative called Business Innovation and Enhance Exports for Lebanon (BIEEL). Predicting an expansion of agro-food exports of products “in BIEEL scope” – covering live animals and animal products, vegetable products, prepared foodstuffs, beverages and tobacco, and animal or vegetable fats and oils – by $50 million at the end of 2023 in comparison to a 2019 baseline, the initiative said that exports in these four categories showed an improvement of $387 million: from $627 million in 2019 to $1.01 billion in 2021, a 62 percent increase.
However, BIEEL conceded that exports in the category of prepared foodstuffs experienced a juxtaposition of decrease in volume and increase in value. It also acknowledged that export achievements to EU markets have been limited by qualitative and quantitative restrictions and noted that 50 percent in agro-food exports in 2019 went to a total of seven countries, four of which are in the Gulf region and two in the Mashriq, with the geographic destination outlier being the United States.
While promising as indications of agro-food export potentials, such short-term numbers may be questionable from sustainability and data integrity angles. They also reveal little to nothing on the background and role of infrastructures in the sector’s efficient and sustainable performance of churning out agro-food products and delivering them to domestic and international markets.
Digging into the history of the Lebanese pre-conflict, conflict, and contemporary post-conflict economy uncovers how the present weakness of dedicated agricultural infrastructures appears to have been caused by the preoccupations with the development of mercantile services, especially financial intermediation. This is the known mindset of the post-conflict period of the 1990s which has lingered since reconstruction, and illuminates but does not explain the degree of attention that was withheld from the agriculture sector. This disregard for real economy can be traced through things such as budget allocations, investments, and the contribution of agriculture to the GDP.
The contribution of agriculture to Lebanese GDP shows a somewhat counterintuitive trajectory for a country that is part of the global south. The trajectory seems more congruent with a small and ambitious services-driven economy that has somehow not succeeded to break into the top ranks of upper middle-income countries. But perhaps the fluctuations in the Lebanese Gross National Agricultural Product (GNAP), as displayed in a paper authored by Riad Saade, the founding president of the Centre De Recherches et d’Etudes Agricoles Libanais (CREAL), have to be seen firstly in the context of a country that was at an epicenter of regional and geopolitical tensions during the Cold War, while also being situated in a bridge position between overdeveloped Europe, struggling Africa, and rapidly developing Arabia.
CREAL numbers say that between 1962 and 1966, the GNAP of Lebanon increased by 48 percent. This was during a period when agricultural productivity in developed countries was progressing by scientific leaps and bounds, due to the introduction of new farming techniques and high-yield crop varieties (wheat, rice, maize, and others). But shortly thereafter, at the time when crop yield transformations along with corporate dominance over agriculture were spreading from developed countries to emerging markets in the late 1960s, Lebanon seems to have experienced a phase of stagnation or stabilization. For several years before the outbreak of internal conflict in the mid-1970s, Lebanese GNAP remained approximately at the 1966 level.
From the mid-1970s, during Lebanon’s cantonization over 15 years of externally induced, internal conflict, the contribution of agriculture to GDP seems to have reached output levels never seen before or after. But in the waning years of the Lebanese conflict, GNAP crashed in 1988, leading Saade to conclude in his writings that destruction of the agricultural sector was taking place during the war. Indeed, a comparison of GNAP in 1988 against 1976 shows a significant drop, despite the peaks of the intervening years when agro output appears to have been easily twice that seen in 2002 or 2004.

The GNAP performance in the post-conflict decades has been fluctuating, with agricultural performance perhaps being in line with the volatility of GDP growth for the country overall. There was a relative peak in GNAP in the first part of 2010s, a crash in 2020, and a chaotic situation thereafter. The post-conflict period saw a country with population growth that was below that of many other emerging markets, especially that of large neighbors such as Egypt, Yemen, Syria, and Iraq. Against this subdued demographic development, Lebanese agriculture approached a societal position emulating those seen in developed markets, but without the very high agro-food sector productivity gains seen in Western Europe. In summary,[inlinetweet prefix=”” tweeter=”” suffix=””] agriculture was clearly playing a lesser and lesser role in the priority lists of Lebanese political and economic decision makers when compared to services and financial intermediation.[/inlinetweet]
The state’s relative disinterest in the achievement of agricultural productivity increases apparently affected both agriculture and agro-industry, which aligns with the narrative that all manufacturing industry during the post-war years was handicapped by increasing comparative disadvantages when compared to peer countries. On top of internal and regional economic and policy competitiveness impediments of all industries, the public administration and institutional integrity of Lebanon were sinking into patterns which were increasingly bad for doing business.
Corruption either had been present since Ottoman Empire days or crept in during the late 1960s, followed by bad institution building and bureaucratization, which in turn preceded the total absence of effective public administrative power from the agro-food sector in the 1970s and 80s, and into the 90s. “Since 1992, the launching year of Lebanon’s reconstruction, and until today, in 2021, the Lebanese agriculture has been literally ignored by the state of Lebanon and even considered as unnecessary by certain political currents,” Saade opined last year.
According to his more recent introduction to CREAL’s report for agricultural production in 2021, last year saw farm gate prices influenced adversely as well as advantageously by factors ranging from good harvests in Lebanon to a crop crisis in Syria which restricted outflows of produce to Lebanon. The combination of “random export markets” and demand conditions that were “shamefully exploited by the domestic wholesale markets” increased the sector’s fragility, Saade lamented.
Although the value of crops in agriculture improved by 19 percent between 2020 and 2021, they remained, according to CREAL, below the valuations achieved in 2017, ‘18, and ‘19. On the side of animal husbandry, the results in 2021 remained on a worsening trajectory, with a 35 percent loss over 2020 and a halving when compared to 2019. “This affected all sectors from poultry to cattle, sheep and goats. Only beekeeping benefited from an exceptional year in 2021, confirming the economic and biological importance of this production,” the organization’s yearly report on Lebanese Agriculture for 2021 said. In terms of total value of production in crops and animals last year, it stated a contraction of 8 percent and a continuing downward trend.
A good percentage?
It is anyone’s guess if agriculture will rise in the wake of the economic crisis to contribute more than the current 3.1 percent to the Lebanese economy – which must be assumed to have a very significant margin of uncertainty due to the informality in the sector. It is also anyone’s assumption what would be an optimal level of agricultural GDP for this country with all its historic and current contradictions and peculiarities.
There are 183 countries for which official but not necessarily perfect data for the role of agriculture in GDP – given the intrinsic weakness of the GDP gauge and the substantial presence of informality in agriculture that exists not just in Lebanon – is easily available. Among these 183 countries, the average contribution of agriculture to GDP is 9.9 percent (world average) and the median value, with half of the countries above and half below, is 6.4 to 6.5 percent.
Developed countries – whose populations may have suffered in their cultural integrities more than recognized in their decoupling from their agrarian and pastoral roots – are mostly in the approximate third of countries that show below 1 percent of agricultural contributions to GDPs. Some of the countries that achieve between 10 and 60 percent of GDP through agriculture, are tragically unable to feed and give decent livelihoods to all their people. Could there be a sweet GNAP spot, perhaps located somewhere between the global median and average rate for the ratio of agriculture to GDP?
The questions and collective human survival challenges that underlie the quagmire of what an optimal agricultural contribution to GDP might be, are related to the latter two-thirds of the word “agriculture”. [inlinetweet prefix=”” tweeter=”” suffix=””]Societies have to define what structures they want to exist in, and how far the “culture of the field” should take precedence [/inlinetweet]over patterns of behavior that are detached from the land through a breakdown of societal communication in traps of digital anonymity, and the embrace of virtual dreamscapes fraught with dangers of isolating people from their social contracts and existences. All the while, globalized man is still caught up in old blind races for economic growth in industrial and also agricultural outputs which have contributed massively to the need for 21st century climate action and correction attempts.
Irrespective of the many infrastructure barriers that exist, the agricultural and agro-industrial landscape of Lebanon has been marked from the beginning of the crisis years with entrepreneurial energies (an energy that is not subject to the WEF Nexus dilemma) in well-established agro-industrial minds and a vibrant startup scene concentrated in highly visible innovation centers that have been supported by international networks, away from dependency on the whims of corrupt bureaucracies, dysfunctional institutions and an impotent state. How innovative agriculturalists, agro-industrialists, and vibrant entrepreneurial startups will prevail against rising global challenges is impossible to predict.
But even if they evade climate disaster, corruption and systemic perils, a wide-ranging infrastructure reboot is a change that has to come. This departure from the old system has to involve the state as a stakeholder and large international enterprises and accountable state-owned enterprises, and joint venture companies in the construction of strategic infrastructure assets from utility-scale renewable energy plants and strategic new grain silos, to distinct facilities such as functioning labs and affordable warehousing of harvests. It is the move from the infamy of an infrastructure that consists of nothing but gaps, to one that can carry agricultural production and reduce unnecessary losses of food.
Language becomes a tool of fools when it simplifies complex systems and developments into slogans such as democracy and revolution. One blatant case of language confusion that today dogs many discussions of food security in a worldwide context, is the depiction of hunger as a sudden global crisis that needs to be tackled with grand politics and tools of international diplomacy.
The alarmist use of terms like the “global wheat crisis” and “international food crisis” runs afoul of the contradictory evidence of previous complacency over food wastage, and threats of food insecurity around the world. Moreover, the sensationalist and political grandstanding seen in the past few months contains the danger of chasing quick fixes for politically useful food insecurity.
Fixes that remove artificial barriers to exports by warring parties and throw money at balance of trade disruptions can address the moment, but will in all likelihood fade in the next year. The politically and economically hyped wheat crisis of 2022, having turned into yesteryear’s narrative and exhausted national attention spans, will then distract from the need to tackle the deep-running climate, conflict, food distribution and utilization challenges which are entwined with the coming winter’s predicted famine in parts of Somalia. And that is without considering the persistent problems in equitable production of food in a world that is, according to United Nations’ (UN) projections, heading from being 8 billion strong at the end of this year towards a global population of 9 billion around 2037.
On a smaller scale, this dilemma of juxtaposed, unresolved, systemic problems and overemphasized temporary factors plays out as its own drama in Lebanon. When compared to fears over the availability of food, which appeared to have been aggravated by sudden new barriers to the importing of Ukrainian and Russian wheat (including speculative price peaks that railed global commodity food markets during this summer) and by the loss of the silos at Beirut port, the politics behind the domestic social safety net design, and the depreciation of the Lebanese pound, continue to be the major driver of food insecurity in Lebanon. These problems have been ignored either deliberately or incompetently but, in any case, recklessly.
Lebanon is a tiny but fertile country. The incongruence between historic reality and inflated problems of food insecurity today is another, more serious contradiction of note. Tiny countries can have huge problems in comparison to their demographic or geographic scale. But as long as they are properly run, tiny countries are good at developing solutions for their own problems.
Taking Lebanon as a system and man-made paradigm rather than a territory, this polity is equipped, or one can say cursed, with a governance system of questionable provenance. Today, the Lebanese governance system is rooted in an imperially and colonially malformed past, and in recent decades has deteriorated into a discordant anti-system of state organization.
Territorial reach is an important component to land and sea-based food production, however. Lebanon is an intriguing case of systemic behavior, but still a very small country. It is the 37th smallest among almost 200 countries, not counting unresolved or partly autonomous territories. Both aspects, the systemic and territorial one, have consequences for national food security.
When engaging in as much international discourse about food security as affected stakeholders, like how the public in Lebanon and Executive are doing this year, profound changes of food systems in national economies and a targeting of global food sovereignty have to be put on an emergency action agenda which also includes the management of increasing intra-national and international conflicts, as well as inequality and mitigation of climate risks.
Food, in this context, is both a crucial base for human sustenance and perhaps the most powerful agent of constructive transition available to mankind. But this transformational power has to be understood and used without ideological partisanship, beginning from the terminology attached to food and agriculture.
On a conceptual level, it defies conventional wisdom to speak of the revolution of anything in an agricultural context. It is a misnomer, but also seems unhelpful for thinking about the path of future agricultural transitions when past centuries’ ideological framing of scientific research have labeled long periods of gradual innovation and transitional development in the system of agriculture as “revolutions”, even though they are changes that are organic in every sense of the word. Consider the “first agricultural revolution” with its 20th century host of associated theories, the so-called Arab and British agricultural revolutions, or the last century’s “green revolution” that occurred under the increasing grip of corporatized cultivation of soil, and the degradation of diverse rural cultures of soil-based tribes and families.
Interacting with the seasons, the land, and nature’s inputs, plus investing the human labor needed for agricultural productiveness, is a fundamentally conservative act – in the sense of ‘conservare’, the Latin verb meaning “to keep safe” or “to preserve”. Revolution expresses the very different intention of rolling back a status quo perceived as failed; it is the act of turning everything and nothing around, whatever the cost and violence that comes with it.
Food sovereignty
For the purpose of a better discussion on the integrated future of agriculture, in a global system of human physical and mental sustenance on the level of a species that has created the Anthropocene, let us discuss what might be called planet-wide food sovereignty; the world-encompassing achievement of food security with all that it entails, implemented by a global network of interdependent national food systems.
Then let us discuss democratic food sovereignty. Drawing on definitions devised earlier in this century, this refers to the right of peoples to define their own food system and agriculture: the system of producing and making accessible culturally rooted and ethically accepted food on the level of a clearly defined national or sub-national realm, while maintaining respect for nature through the use of ecologically and economically sound, sustainable methods.
Thinking of the more than six million people who have made their home in this country, let us propose that Lebanon needs a micro-to-macro “agroconservalution” aimed at food sovereignty. This is to declare that a solution in agriculture and in food system construction on the famously fertile Lebanese soil would never be a revolution, but more of an incremental series of interconnected innovations and system building.
The neologism proposed here is not seeking to enter the dictionary as much as it wants to be a reminder for the harmonization of conservation (“conserva”) and revolution (“lution”), or actually innovation in a holistic management of everything, “agro”.
A Lebanese food security solution would be microeconomic; from an entrepreneurial ground-up sense, with digitally advanced startups and initiatives that are found along the entire food value chain, from inputs to production, to testing, packaging, branding, marketing, distribution and equitable social access. For better micro interaction with the supply side, Executive calls to elevate building awareness for agro-food entrepreneurship among the public.
Even more importantly, we ask for higher awareness and attention from economic and policy decision makers. From the rise of freekeh as a Lebanese superfood, to the potential for biomass utilization, there are many emerging subsectors of the agro-economy which warrant such attention.
In suggesting an effort among the private sector for improving awareness and market access, [inlinetweet prefix=”” tweeter=”” suffix=””]Executive calls on retailers, especially leading supermarket chains, to promote domestically produced processed foodstuffs,[/inlinetweet] and donate prominent shelf space and awareness campaigns to small local producers and quality food processing startups.
The new food security solution has to be macroeconomic in equal measure. This could be achieved, if the state, as partners in a new real economic focus, was achieving regulatory and supervisory diligence, and finally providing strategic support to food security by governmental entities that work in a synergistic concert.
Instead of asking for another internationally funded and conducted study, or presenting projects with high corruption risk, or devising the third or fourth iteration of an agricultural strategy that is overflowing in the right words and underwhelming in presenting budgetary possibilities and all numerical assessments, a homegrown consolidated environmental, cultural, agro-industrial, and agricultural strategy is in order.
The insufficiency of public systems underlying food safety and upholding food security targets was evidenced this autumn by the cholera outbreak. It made for an epidemic that was avoidable, considering cases were heaviest among population groups who could least protect themselves by using simple means of hygiene and uncontaminated water because they cannot access such luxuries.
To sum up the idea of “agroconservalution”, micro and macro solutions such as above would be constituent components of global food sovereignty in alignment with the understanding that nations’ contributions to international peace are not achievable by striving for preeminence with economic, military or political means, but by seeking to contribute to global self-sufficiency at a time of new challenges of planetary proportions.
On the national scale of Lebanon, a new key performance indicator of “agro-conserva-lution’’ would be agro; in the sense of comprising agricultural, agro-industrial, and food industry stakeholders in hospitality, delivery, and humanitarian services. It would conserve; rebuild and improve soil and social and economic structures of an historic small-holder rural system and the famed Lebanese culinary tradition and healthy diet. It would change; radically from the roots up – innovate primary, secondary, tertiary, and vocational agro-sector education, rural inclusiveness, access to finance, social safety, interaction with markets, and most of all the legislative approach and real-economy mindset of the state.
The change and innovation trajectory from the short term onward would include continued expansion and diversification into specialty production segments from wine and goat’s cheese, to healthier alcoholic beverages and high-in-demand organic fruit and vegetable preserves, to herb and spice mixes. It would be a fitting dream for a country that has nothing to lose but the abysmal dysfunctionalities of its previous governance and economic systems.