Agriculture in Sri Lanka
The primary form of agriculture in Sri Lanka is rice production. Rice is cultivated during Maha and Yala seasons. Tea is cultivated in the central highlands and is a major source of foreign exchange. Vegetables, fruits and oilseed crops are also cultivated in the country. There are two Agriculture Parks abbreviated as A.Parks established by the Department of Agriculture. Out of the total population in Sri Lanka, 31.8% engages in agricultural activities. Agriculture and allied sectors like forestry and fisheries accounted for 18% of the GDP in 2014, about 26.4% of the workforce or employment.
Rice cultivation in Sri Lanka
The beginning of Paddy Cultivation in Sri Lanka, back to the history between 3000 years and 3rd century B.C. Mostly paddy field basedrivers or water resources. The governing Royal minds of Sri Lanka saw the enriching importance of Rice Cultivation that provoked them to build tanks of extraordinary size and numbers to irrigate the mass scale rice production. At Present much of the human and animal labour is replaced with technology, adding greater deal of efficiency towards the production process.
Present day rice production is one of the main productions and staple foods in Sri Lanka. Rice is the staple food of 21 million Sri Lankans and is the livelihood of more than 2 million farmers. More than 30 percent of the total labour force is directly or indirectly involved in the rice sector. The annual per capita consumption of rice was around 92 kg in 1998. In 1990s total production was near 3 million Metric Tonnes of rough rice, which is about 60 percent of the national requirement. Sri Lanka needs about 3-4 million Metric Tonnes annually. Modern day 30-40% rice import form India. Because Sri Lankan farmers left farming. It's causes mainly Unknown Kidney disease and Government ban some chemicals. It cultivates mostly North Central and East provinces of Sri Lanka. The seasons are called Maha season and Yala season. Maha Season starts by September and ends by March.Yala season starts by May and ends by August. Yala season is main and most important paddy season.
Tea plantations
As an attempt to recuperate the losses caused by the downfall of coffee plantation, Tea was planted in Sri Lanka as an experimental crop. Several research groups were sent to Assam to study and identify the necessary prerequisites for the new crop. In between this tea industry was introduced to the country in 1867 by James Taylor, the British planter who arrived in 1852, in Lool Kandura. It is one of the main sources of foreign exchange for Sri Lanka and accounts for 2% of GDP, generating roughly $700 million annually to the economy of Sri Lanka. It employs, directly or indirectly over 1 million people, and in 1995 directly employed 215,338 on tea plantations and estates. Sri Lanka is the world's fourth largest producer of tea. In 1995, it was the world's leading exporter of tea, with 23% of the total world export, but it has since been surpassed by Kenya.The humidity, cool temperatures, and rainfall in the country's central highlands provide a climate that favors the production of high quality tea.
The major tea growing areas are Kandy and Nuwara Eliya in Central Province, Badulla, Bandarawela and Haputale in Uva Province, Galle, Matara and Mulkirigala in Southern Province, and Ratnapura and Kegalle in Sabaragamuwa Province.
Fruits and vegetables
Around eighty different varieties of fruits and vegetables are grown in Sri Lanka's varied agro-climatic areas. The cool and salubrious climatic conditions in the hill country are ideal for temperate crops such as carrot, leek, cabbage, cauliflower, salad leaves, beet, bean, bell pepper, and salad cucumber. The well-demarcated low country and dry wet areas are suitable for a variety of tropical fruits and vegetables ranging from green chilli, red onion, pumpkin, bitter gourd, melon, sweet and sour banana types, queen pineapple, papaya, mango, lemon and gherkins.Certain indigenous yams colloquially named innala and kiri ala, underwater stems of kohila and nelum ala and fruits and pods of perennial crops such as bread fruit, young jak and murunga are foreign exchange spinners of the country. It is the same with special flavored Sri Lankan pineapple, mangosteen, ripe jak, avocado, rambutan, starfruit and anoda.
Sri Lanka produces more than 800,000 metric tons of fruits and vegetables annually and exports both fresh and processed varieties to many destinations in the world. 90 per cent of the fresh product is targeted to the Middle East and the Maldives and almost about 75 percent of the processed products go to the European market.
Currently Sri Lanka is looking to obtain arid-climate-resistant fruit species from Egypt to develop agriculture in the dry zones of Sri Lanka.
Oilseed crops
Oilseed crops such as groundnut, sesame, sunflower and mustard are also cultivated in Sri Lanka. Groundnut is grown mainly in Moneragala, Hambantota, Kurunegala, Anuradhapura, Badulla, Ratnapura and Puttalam districts. Though groundnut is an oil crop, it has a demand as a snack and confectionery in Sri Lanka.Agrotechnology parks
Sri Lanka's first agrotechnology park was established in Kandy district. The park is bounded on three sides by the river Mahaweli in the historically important place of Gannoruwa in Kandy and lies at an altitude of 473 m above sea level in a total area of two square kilometers. The second agrotechnology park was established in Hambantota district adjoining the government farm in Batatha.Spices
In 2015 alone, Sri Lanka’s spice exports amounted to USD 377 million, up from USD 264 million the previous year.Sri Lanka’s most famous export, cinnamon is the island’s premier spice export. Industry insiders classify the spice into two forms, Ceylon cinnamon, and Cassia Cinnamon. Ceylon cinnamon is the costlier variety and is considered to be a much more upmarket product by those in the West. Sri Lanka exported USD 128 million worth of cinnamon in 2014, which accounted for 28% of global cinnamon exports for that year.
Black pepper 2nd largest export spice in Sri Lanka. Most black pepper export to India. But India and Vietnam re-export to Europe Sri Lankan pepper under the Indian/Vietnam label.
English Name | Sinhala Name | Tamil Name |
Curry Leaves | කරපිංචා | கறிவேப்பிலை |
Turmeric | කහ | மஞ்சள் |
Clove | කාරාබුනැටි | கிராம்பு |
Cinnamon | කුරුඳු | இலவங்கப்பட்டை |
Pepper | ගම්මිරිස් | மிளகு |
Cardamom | එංසහල් | ஏலக்காய் |
Lemongrass and Citronella | සේර | எலுமிச்சை |
Nutmeg and Mace | සාදික්කා, වසාවාසි | ஜாதிக்காய், மெஸ் |
Vanila | වැනිලා | வெண்ணிலா |
Ginger | ඉඟුරු | இஞ்சி |
Coconut production in Sri Lanka
Development issues
According to the World Bank:- Weaknesses in strategy and policy
- Heavy public sector regulatory interventions in commodity and input/factor markets
- Weak delivery of services in rural areas
- Destructive impact of civil conflict and tsunami