This article needs to be updated. Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information.(November 2023)
Romania has an agricultural capacity of approximately 14.7 million hectares (57,000 sq mi) 9.38 million are used as arable land.[1] In 2008, an evaluation revealed that 6.8 million hectares are not used.[2] In 2018, Romania was the third biggest agricultural producer of the EU and produced the largest amount of maize.[3]
Agriculture summed up about 4.3% of GDP in 2019, down from 12.6% in 2004.[4] As of 2017, 25.8% of the Romanian workforce is employed in agriculture, compared to an EU average of 4.4%.[5] As of 2016, only 1.6% of Romanian farmers were recipients of tertiary education, compared to an 8.9% EU average.[5]
Mechanization is comparatively poor, with one tractor available for every 54 hectares, while the EU average is one tractor for every 13 hectares.[6] Approximately 170,000 tractors exist in Romania, of which about 80% are aging or obsolete.[6] In many regions of the country, farmers still use horse-drawn agriculture tools and rely on animal power. Unlike Western Europe, where tractors are replaced after 3,000-4,000 hours of use, in Romania they sometimes last up to 12,000 hours.[6]
The main problems encountered by Romanian agriculturists are a lack of major investments in agriculture, due to difficulty in accessing available funds, fragmentation and erosion of soil, property-related lawsuits and obsolete technology. Several major companies have entered the Romanian market, including Smithfield Foods, Cargill, Bunge, Glencore, Lactalis, and Meggle AG. These companies have since invested hundreds of millions of euros in Romania.
Production
According to the National Statistics Institute, in 2006 991,000 ha of sun-flower and 191,000 ha of soybean were cultivated. Cereal production in 2006 stood at 15.1 million tons, including 5.3 million tons of wheat and 8.6 million tons of maize.[7] In 2007, a severe drought destroyed over 60% of crops. Wheat production subsequently fell to 3 million tons, and prices fell 25%. Analysts claimed it was the worst harvest since 1940.[8]
Production year
2000
2001
2002
2003
2004
2005
2006
2007
2008
2009
2010
2011
Wheat
4434
7735
4421
2479
7812
7340
5526
3044
7181
5202
5587
7192
Potatoes
3469
3997
4077
3947
4230
3738
4015
3712
3649
4004
3258
4113
Sunflower
720
823
1002
1506
1557
1340
1526
546
1169
1098
1264
1864
Tomatoes
-
651
658
818
805
379
571
407
536
470
414
560
Apples
-
507
491
811
1097
611
579
472
455
513
543
624
Cereal, fruit and vegetable production: (thousands of tons)[9]
Genetically modified soybean was legal to cultivate and sell until entry into the EU in 2007, whereupon they were banned. This resulted in an immediate withdrawal of 70% of the soybean hectares in 2008 and a trade deficit of €117.4m for purchase of replacement products. Farmer sentiment is very much in favour of relegalisation.[13]