Your Reading List

Algeria Invites Interest From Farmland Investors

Reading Time: < 1 minute

Published: September 29, 2011

Algeria has for the first time formally invited expressions of interest from investors, including foreigners, seeking to acquire stakes in the country s farming sector.

Agriculture in Algeria, an energy-exporting former French colony, has been largely closed to foreign investment but the government is cautiously opening up the sector to try to increase productivity and cut dependence on food imports.

The tender for expressions of interest, published on the Agriculture Ministry s website, www.minagri. dz, states that investors will be able to take stakes in pilot farming enterprises.

Read Also

Female injecting semaglutide in her abdomen. Glucagon-like peptide-1 (GLP-1) receptor agonists such as semaglutide are intended to help reduce serious health risks in patients with type 2 diabetes, obesity, heart or blood vessel disease and/or chronic kidney disease, but also to help patients with weight-related medical conditions lose weight in combination with diet and exercise. Photo: Munro/E+/Getty Images

Producers must tread carefully when food fads come calling

Canada’s farmers can’t afford to farm the fads but would still do well to observe changing consumer behaviours for common threads throughout, Laura Rance writes.

But it said: The land and buildings … associated with these farms are, and remain, state property.

It said the tender was open to domestic and foreign investors. It did not give any details of what farms were open to investment or what surface area they covered.

Algeria s parliament last year approved a law allowing private firms to lease government farmland for the first time.

Agriculture Ministry officials said at the time the law would not open the door for state-owned farmland to be sold, a politically sensitive issue in Algeria.

explore

Stories from our other publications