
Mazouzi, who already owns a tomato farm, has built greenhouses and already harvested a banana crop on the new land near the Mediterranean coast.
While he won’t give figures, he says the venture is “very profitable”, and the government, reaping the benefits of early domestic plantings of a crop that cost $35 million to import in the first quarter of 2019, is happy too.
Mazouzi says bananas earn more for him than other crops because mostly imported fruit is more expensive.
He plans to create an association for banana producers and wants the government to develop the crop more widely along the coast.
“Banana cultivation will help Algeria gain employment and wealth,” he said at his banana farm west of the capital, Algiers. “We are looking for investment support.”
For Algeria, an OPEC member that failed to develop its non-energy sectors before oil prices fell, the need to push the state-controlled economy to produce goods it currently buys abroad is growing ever more urgent.
Food imports, accounting for around 20 per cent of Algeria’s purchases from abroad, totalled $8.07 billion in 2019, and the government has been providing loans at low interest rates for farmers to grow other crops too.
Agriculture Minister Abdelhamid Hamdani last week announced plans to cut that annual bill by at least $2.5 billion by boosting domestic output and rationing spending on purchases from abroad. — Reuters
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