The Ministry of Agriculture and Animal Resources has unveiled a “100-day plan” aimed at reforming and developing the country’s agriculture and livestock sector.
The initiative is intended to improve performance, increase the sector’s contribution to the national economy, and lay the foundations for a broader five-year strategy.
The plan was announced during a meeting at the National Centre for Agricultural Prevention and Quarantine in Tripoli, attended by senior officials and technical bodies.
It includes an emergency programme ahead of Eid al-Adha, with mobile veterinary clinics and laboratories to be deployed in major livestock markets. These will offer free health checks for sacrificial animals and record disease cases, with the aim of building a field database to strengthen oversight and inform import policies.
The strategy is structured in four phases, including digital transformation, the creation of a national database for farmers and breeders, and efforts to improve livestock genetics.
It also includes campaigns on animal health and crop protection, alongside the provision of vaccines, pesticides and climate-adapted seeds. The final phase focuses on training programmes to improve workforce capacity across the sector.
Officials say the plan forms part of a wider reform agenda to address long-standing challenges and promote sustainable agricultural development.












