Ministry of Planning, Economic Development and International Cooperation Reviews Targets for the Agriculture and Irrigation Sector in the FY 2025/2026 Plan

31 August 2025
Agriculture and Irrigation are key pillars for enhancing food and water security and supporting sustainable economic development efforts.
144.8 billion EGP in total targeted investments for the agriculture and irrigation sectors in the FY 2025/2026 plan.
Continue expanding agricultural land reclamation programs, improving crop yield per feddan, and increasing water use efficiency.
The Ministry of Planning, Economic Development and
International Cooperation reviewed the targets for the agriculture and
irrigation sector in its report on the FY 2025/2026 plan. The fourth section of
the plan details sectoral targets, starting with commodity sectors like
agriculture, irrigation, manufacturing, mining, and electricity, followed by
productive services sectors, including transport, information and communication
technology, tourism, and the Suez Canal activity.
The 2025/2026 plan document uses a unified analytical
approach for all sectoral targets. It first reviews the economic importance of
the sector, then the specific development vision, ensuring it aligns with the
Sustainable Development Strategy: Egypt Vision 2030, the targets of the
Government Action Program (2024/2025 – 2026/2027), and the national strategy
proposed by the relevant ministry.
H.E. Dr. Rania A. Al-Mashat, Minister of Planning, Economic
Development and International Cooperation, highlighted the dual economic
importance of the agriculture and irrigation sector. It serves as a
foundational pillar of national food security and a mainstay for enhancing the
productive capacities of national industry and its related activities of
transport, trade, and logistics services.
Agriculture is also the primary source of income and
employment, given its vast geographical spread and its employment of over 50%
of the total population in rural areas, who are primarily dependent on
agricultural activities and related animal, poultry, and fish production, as
well as transport, storage, and marketing services.
Total Investments for the Agriculture and Irrigation Sectors
H.E. Dr. Al-Mashat added that agriculture plays a pivotal
role in developing the country's foreign exchange resources through the export
of agricultural products. It also contributes effectively to strengthening its
inter-sectoral linkages with other economic sectors, making it a key driver for
their growth. The agriculture and irrigation sector is one of the most
significant sectors for enhancing the components of sustainable development
across its three dimensions: economic, social, and environmental. Minister
Al-Mashat noted that the plan allocates total investments of about 144.8
billion EGP to agriculture and irrigation activities in 2025/2026, including
17.5 billion EGP in public investments and 127.4 billion EGP in private investments.
Agricultural Production Targets
The Ministry of Planning, Economic Development and
International Cooperation's report indicated the development plan's targets for
2025/2026. Regarding agricultural output, the plan aims for the sector's
production to reach approximately 3.7 trillion EGP in 2025/2026, up from an
estimated 3.3 trillion EGP in 2024/2025, and to grow to 5.7 trillion EGP by the
end of the medium-term plan in 2028/2029.
As for agricultural product, the goal is to increase the
agricultural product—after excluding the value of intermediate production
inputs—to about 2.6 trillion EGP in 2025/2026, reaching 4 trillion EGP in
2028/2029, a growth rate of 53.8%, compared to the expected product of about
2.3 trillion EGP in 2024/2025.
Key Targets in the Agriculture and Irrigation Sectors
The report explained that the priorities for agricultural
investment and development in the plan include: continuing the expansion of
agricultural reclamation programs in the Toshka, North and Central Sinai, and New
Delta lands. Expanding programs to improve crop yield per feddan by 10% to 15%,
by increasing the efficiency of land and water use through the cultivation of
high-yield, early-maturing, and low-water-consuming crops, developing and
modernizing field irrigation systems to benefit 18% of the total area,
improving agricultural drainage methods and expanding the application of modern
agricultural practices, such as drip and pivot irrigation, expanding greenhouse
projects and protected agriculture systems, reducing agricultural waste and
developing the agricultural extension system, expanding the application of the
contract farming system (1.8 million feddans) to include other agricultural
products in addition to wheat, sugarcane, sugar beets, tomatoes, potatoes, and
citrus fruits, such as yellow corn, cotton, and oilseed crops (sunflower and
soybeans), continuing to activate programs for the production of selected seeds
to meet agricultural needs and reduce reliance on imports, which are subject to
price fluctuations, quality variations, and potential incompatibility with the
Egyptian agricultural environment. Diversifying the origins of agricultural
imports—especially wheat and corn—and expanding the storage capacity of wheat
silos to reach about 5.5 million tons in the plan year, expanding the cropped
area to exceed 21 million feddans in 2025/2026, including wheat (52%), corn
(55%), and fava beans (39%), completing the establishment of 18 agricultural
complexes in North and South Sinai governorates, as well as developing the
agricultural land tenure system (Farmer's Card) to reach 80% of beneficiaries.
Livestock Development
The plan's priorities for agricultural investment and
development also include continuing to develop livestock, with a targeted
increase of one million heads during 2025/2026. It also focuses on developing
poultry and fish farming projects to achieve self-sufficiency in white meat and
fish, while increasing red meat self-sufficiency to 60%. This will be achieved
by continuing to activate projects for revitalizing the veal industry and milk
collection centers, fish farms at البركة
in Kafr El Sheikh and East Al-Tafri'a in Port Said, and projects to enhance
fish resources in Qarun, Manzala, and Burullus lakes. The plan also aims to
expand the export of surplus agricultural products, such as vegetables and
fruits, to exceed $5 billion in value during the plan year.
Water Resources Development
Complementing agricultural development efforts, the Ministry
of Water Resources and Irrigation's plan aims to develop water resources and
increase their use efficiency by: expanding projects for canal rehabilitation
and lining over a length of 600 km, expanding the transition to modern field
irrigation systems, constructing and upgrading pumping stations, building dams,
artificial lakes, and reservoirs to hold floodwater, completing the
construction of the New Deirout Barrage to improve irrigation for 1.6 million
feddans in five governorates in Upper Egypt, constructing, replacing, and
renovating about 616 barrages and other structures (inlets, bridges, weirs,
etc.), constructing 85 dams, artificial lakes, and underground reservoirs to
contain floodwater, continuing efforts to rehabilitate drains, including Jabal
al-Akhdar, Belbeis, Qalyubia, and Bahr al-Baqar, and their associated
structures, to accommodate the discharge of treated sewage stations, completing
the development of the Toshka spillway, constructing the feeder canal for the
Thomas and Afiya area, 57 km long, in the Toshka project in Aswan, addressing
siltation in Lake Nasser, improving water quality in the Kitchener Drain,
protecting the coast of Alexandria and reinforcing submerged breakwaters (Phase
1), constructing and replacing covered agricultural drainage networks in an
area of 60,000 feddans in both Lower and Upper Egypt, as well as constructing
and replacing about 35 industrial structures on drains (bridges, culverts,
etc.).