French companies are ready to share their expertise with Qatar in the
field of agriculture and aquaculture to help the country attain
self-sufficiency, a senior official of Business France has said.
Business France, the national agency supporting the international
development of the French economy, helps French companies to develop
partnerships abroad.
“We have a lot of technologies and solutions which have been tested in
France, we can offer a lot to Qatar to develop the production of
different kind of products in the field of technologies in vegetable and
fruit production and fish farming (aquaculture), among others,”
Business France’s Middle East managing director Marc Cagnard said.
“We are experts in green houses and several other new technologies in
farming, and we want to bring some new technology with a lot of
optimisation of existing solutions,” he noted.
Cagnard was speaking on the sidelines of the ‘French Technologies in
Agriculture’ seminar in Doha yesterday, which brought a delegation of 13
French companies specialised in agriculture and aquaculture.
The event explored new opportunities of partnerships and transfer of
technologies between French companies and Qatar in agriculture.
Ministry of Municipality and Environment’s (MME) agricultural research
department director Massoud al-Marri, Aquaculture Department head
Mohammed al-Abdulla, local farm owners and guests took part in the
seminar.
The seminar saw French companies presenting their know-how, experience
and the kind of products or services they can develop with Qatar to
respond to the latter’s needs for
self-sufficiency.
French agribusiness experts are specialised in new concept of fruits and
vegetable production, from greenhouses to urban farms (Aquaponie
Valley, Barre, CMF Florentaises, FUL, Refarmers), monitoring the
proliferation of infectious diseases (Octopus Robots), organic-mineral
fertilisers (OvinAlp) and alternatives to agricultural additives based
on algae (Olmix Group).
PFI Nouvelles Vagues and Tarbouriech presented their experience in
aquaculture and fisheries while Allice tackled reproduction physiology
and animal genetic selection.
Another company, Agrosolutions, gathers experts and consultants in
innovative and sustainable solutions for agriculture, environment,
territories management and food industries while Cesbron deals with
systems for industrial processes such as refrigeration, air treatment
and energy controls.
“France has a lot to offer in the field of agriculture and sustainable
development. After hosting the COP21 and the One Planet Summit, French
ecosystem is focused on innovations to produce food while protecting the
environment,” Business France Qatar head Christelle Peyran said in a
statement.
“We are the third European producer of fruits and vegetables. We have
developed new concepts of urban farming or aquaponics,” she added.
According to Business France Qatar, France is the first agricultural
producer in Europe and has more than 19mn cattle, more than any other
country and has 34% of all bovine livestock raised for meat in Europe.
France’s fishing industry – from boat to consumer – is ranked fourth
among sea fisheries in Europe with 9% of community catches; continental
France has 63 fishing ports, 38 fish markets, 12 producers’
organisations and 608 wholesale and processing companies.
France produces 9mn tonnes (mt) of fruit and vegetables and 5.3mt of ware potatoes in a total area of 550,000 hectares.
“The government of Qatar launched several initiatives to support local
production such as a proactive food safety programme ‘Qatar National
Food Security Programme’ aiming to develop the agriculture market and
ensure food self-efficiency by 2023, Peyran said.
Marc Cagnard at the seminar.