Open Data Lebanon

Open Data Lebanon

A citizen initiative

الرئيسيةالبياناتحول
إرسال بيانات
Open Data Lebanon

Lebanon's Open Data Platform is a citizen initiative by Dr. Wissam Sammouri, aiming to make public data and information accessible, searchable, and available for all.

منصة البيانات المفتوحة للبنان

Explore

  • All Data Resources
  • Search

Contribute

  • Submit Data
  • About

© 2020 Open Data Lebanon. All data from original sources.

Powered by Anthros Analytics
All Categories
🌾

Agriculture

زراعة

24 datasets

Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) of the United Nations

food-and-agriculture-organization-fao-of-the-united-nations

PDF

FAO – Lebanon Agriculture Damage and Loss Assessment 2023–2024

This report assesses the damage and losses suffered by Lebanon’s agriculture sector due to conflict. It covers the period from October 2023 to November 2024 using FAO’s DIEM-Impact methodology. The assessment analyzes impacts on crops, livestock, forestry, fisheries, and aquaculture. It provides monetary estimates of damages, production losses, and affected agricultural assets. Geospatial data and remote sensing were used to identify affected areas and subsectors. The report highlights regional disparities, with southern Lebanon and the Bekaa most impacted. It also outlines recovery and reconstruction needs to support food security and rural livelihoods.

LebanonJan 2026
WF

WFP

PDF

WFP Lebanon Situation Report - November 2025

This report offers a concise, evidence-based overview of Lebanon’s deepening food security crisis, showing how conflict aftershocks, displacement, and funding shortfalls are affecting millions, and how WFP is responding on the ground to meet urgent needs despite severe resource constraints.

LebanonDec 2025
IF

integrated-food-security-phase-classification

PDF

IPC ACUTE FOOD INSECURITY ANALYSIS

According to the latest projection update, around 1.26 million people (23 percent of the analyzed population) are expected to face high levels of acute food insecurity (IPC Phase 3 or above) between April and September 2024. This includes 85,000 people (2 percent of the analyzed population) in IPC Phase 4 (Emergency) and 1.18 million people (21 percent of the analyzed population) in IPC Phase 3 (Crisis). The analyzed population includes Lebanese, Syrian refugees, Palestine Refugees in Lebanon (PRL) and Palestine Refugees from Syria (PRS). Among the 1.26 million people expected to be in IPC Phase 3 or above between April and September 2024, 683,000 are Lebanese residents (18 percent of the resident population), 510,000 are Syrian refugees (34 percent of the Syrians refugees in Lebanon), 55,000 are PRL (31 percent of the PRL population in Lebanon), and 13,600 are PRS (45 percent of the PRS population in Lebanon). Populations classified in IPC Phase 3 or above require urgent humanitarian action to reduce food gaps, protect and restore livelihoods and prevent acute malnutrition.

LebanonMay 2024
United Nations Development Programme

UNDP

PDF

Lebanon State of the Environment and Future Outlook: Turning the Crises into Opportunities

Over the past decade, Lebanon has endured multiple crises, including political instability, the fast changing financial and economic situation, as compounded by the COVID19 outbreak, the Beirut Port explosions and the impact of the Syria crisis These compounded crises have significantly exacerbated pre-existing development challenges in the country, while contributing to the deterioration of an already fragile natural ecosystem, given the immense added pressure on resources. Within this framework, the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP), with support from the UN Refugee Agency (UNHCR) and the United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF) in Lebanon, have partnered to jointly prepare the “The State of the Environment and Future Outlook: Turning the Crises into Opportunities” in close collaboration with the Ministry of Environment. The purpose of the report is to consolidate, analyze and present the latest available data on the environment in various key sectors in Lebanon. Each chapter has been drafted and reviewed by experts across the fields of solid waste, water and wastewater, land management, air pollution and environment policies. The report ultimately seeks to make data and analysis available to the public, policy makers and humanitarian and development partners to support evidence based policies, and to facilitate better planning and programme on environment issues. It also provides forward looking scenarios for the future of the environment and natural resource management in Lebanon. These scenarios include (a) a negative outlook that is based on the current situation and status quo and (b) a more positive outlook that considers these crises as opportunities to build Lebanon forward and break the country’s current unsustainable path. As the multiple crises that Lebanon is experiencing continue to negatively affect the environment across the board, there is a real risk that the positive gains made could be reversed and that the country could face accelerated environmental emergencies of greater impact. This is notwithstanding the fact that the continued environmental degradation will likely further exacerbate Lebanon’s overall crises.

LebanonMar 2022
AI

aub-ifs

PDF

Dynamics of Syrian Refugees in Lebanon's Agriculture Sector

This paper studies the dynamic of Syrian refugees in the agriculture sector in Lebanon and examines the extent to which the sector can take in refugees. The study mainly focuses on the informal ways and methods Syrian refugees practice to be able to access employment in the agriculture sector. It also focuses on the labor dynamics and fundamental challenges that control Syrian refugees’ jobs. The results show that the agriculture sector is able to take in refugees since it’s easy to access this sector due to its informality, its dependence on cheap labor, its reliance on investments from international organizations, and its ‘legality’.

LebanonNov 2021
UE

UN ESCWA

PDF

Multidimensional poverty in Lebanon (2019-2021)

This study examines the multidimensional facets of poverty in Lebanon, for the period of 2019-2021. From a multidimensional poverty perspective, a household can be classified as poor if it is subjected to one or more of aspects (notably health care, medicine services, education, employment, housing and assets) of deprivation, even if it is not income poor. A household deprived of electricity, for example, is classified as deprived in this indicator, and possibly multidimensionally poor, regardless of its financial capacity to subscribe to a private generator. The same classification applies to households that are unable to obtain medicines, irrespective of their financial ability to purchase them. When measuring deprivation in Lebanon using this concept, the multidimensional poverty rate in 2021, according to the most recent household data sources, is 82 per cent (as for the Extreme multidimensional poverty it is estimated at 34 per cent). The analysis in this brief is derived from the Labor Force and Household Living Conditions Survey in Lebanon for the period 2018-2019. The survey was conducted by the Central Administration of Statistics, with support from the International Labor Organization and the European Union.

LebanonSep 2021
OD

Open Data Lebanon

PDF

دراسة عن سوق الخضروات في المملكة العربية السعودية: التبادل التجاري، المنافسون الرئيسيون، امكانات التصدير الغير مستغلة، والأسعار

فرص و حلول لإقتصاد لبنان -1- : دراسة عن سوق الخضروات في المملكة العربية السعودية. أين تكمن فرص لبنان لزيادة صادراته الزراعية نحو المملكة؟ أي خضروات؟ بأي سعر تنافسي؟ كيف يمكن للسفارة المساعدة؟ .دراسة من إعداد الملحق الاقتصادي في سفارة لبنان في المملكة علي محمد أبو علي

LebanonJan 2021
FA

Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations

PDF

FAO Mission to Assess the Impact of the Financial Crisis on Agriculture in the Republic of Lebanon

This report is based on information valid at the time of its finalization in April 2020. Since then, many economic and social developments have taken place in the country. On 4 August 2020, a devastating explosion occurred in the Beirut Port, leaving some 200 people dead and over 6 000 people injured. The blast destroyed parts of the port including the bulk terminal and main grain silo, ruined neighbourhoods in the vicinity and caused material damages in the greater Beirut area. The explosion added another dimension to a multi-faceted crisis Lebanon had already been facing, as the COVID-19 pandemic has exacerbated the deterioration of economic conditions, with unemployment and poverty increasing and inflation rates skyrocketing. In July 2020 (last information available), consumer prices increased by over 112 percent compared to July 2019, while the food price inflation reached over 330 percent year on year. Nevertheless, the current report contains a valid description of the sector that can still be useful to inform policy decisions and provide background information on the agricultural sector in Lebanon.

LebanonDec 2020
NC

Nature Conservation Center

PDF

Important Plant Areas in Lebanon

Lebanon is an important area for plant diversity. Scientist estimate that there are close to 400,000 plant species in the world. These plants species are not evenly distributed, but instead are clustered across the globe.

LebanonDec 2020
NC

Nature Conservation Center

PDF

دليل المدارس للنشاطات البيئيّة اللا صفّية

ينبغي أن يشكل هذا «الدليل» استكمالا عملي للمناهج التربوية، وأن يكون في صدارة الاهتمامات من حيث الأنشطة اللا صفية، لنكرس مقاربة ان البيئة أمانة وضعها أحفادنا في عهدتنا فعلا لا قولا. أما مواضيعه فتندرج ضمن أبواب متعددة من أبسط سبل العناية بالطبيعة والتشجير إلى الحرف التراثية المتشعبة منها والفنون التعبيرية وسائر النشاطات البيئية التي تنمي حس التلامذة وتعزز وعيهم لقيادة حياة يحرصون فيها على بيئتهم ويتوخون التنمية المستدامة في وطنهم الحبيب

LebanonDec 2020
I-

IDAL - Invest in Lebanon

PDF

Olive Oil Industry in Lebanon

Olive oil is amongst the most prominent Lebanese signature agro-industrial products, and a proud part of the country’s history and culinary tradition. Lebanon's diverse topography, fertile soil, microclimates, and olive varieties allow farmers to produce uniquely flavored products.

LebanonOct 2020
GI

Gherbal Initiative

Web App

Lebanon State Budget

Description: Data analysis and visualization of budget laws since 2017.

LebanonJun 2020
FA

Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations

PDF

Lebanon Country Programming Framework 2016-2019

Description: This Country Programming Framework sets out two government priority areas to guide FAO partnership and support with the Government of Lebanon – bringing together innovative international best practices and global standards with national and regional expertise during four years from 2016 to 2019.

LebanonMay 2020
BB

BLOMINVEST BANK

PDF

Poultry Industry in Lebanon – Facing Foreign Competition - قطاع تربية الدواجن في لبنان

Description: Chicken, part of the large poultry family (duck, turkey goose), is present in almost every household’s or restaurant’s kitchen in Lebanon. In fact, consumption per capita is estimated by some at 30 kg per year. The size of the local market hovers around $350 million while imports average $17 million per year. The country is home to more than 10 large poultry producers and some 2,000 poultry farms. The Lebanese poultry producers have the capacity to tend to the entirety of local demand but they are calling for stricter protectionist policies to shield them from foreign competition.

LebanonApr 2020
Central Administration of Statistics

CAS

Excel

Weather statistics 1998-2016

Description: This dataset contains both monthly and yearly weather statistics from 1996 to 2018. This dataset is aggregated by source (Rafiq Al-Hariri Int. airport, Beirut golf, Zahle, Tripoli), temperature (minimum, maximum, average), rain and humidity (humidity rates, maximal wind direction, wind power, rainy days, mm of rain, etc).

LebanonApr 2020
12