At first glance, the numbers appear contradictory.
The Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) imports roughly 85% of its food requirements and remains heavily dependent on overseas suppliers, particularly for staple crops such as wheat, rice and other cereals. On measures of food self-sufficiency, the region ranks among the most import-dependent in the world.
Yet several Gulf countries consistently rank among the world’s most food-secure nations.
How can a region that imports so much of its food also be considered food secure?
The answer lies in understanding the difference between food self-sufficiency and food security, and in the distinctive model the Gulf has developed to manage one of its most fundamental constraints.
Food Security Is Not Food Self-Sufficiency
Food self-sufficiency asks a relatively simple question: Can a country produce the food it consumes?
Food security asks a much broader one: Can people reliably access safe, affordable and nutritious food?
A country can be highly self-sufficient yet remain vulnerable to droughts, supply disruptions or affordability challenges. Conversely, a country can import a large share of its food while maintaining a highly secure food system through strong logistics, diversified sourcing, strategic reserves and purchasing power.
Modern food-security frameworks increasingly reflect this broader perspective by assessing not only domestic production but also affordability, availability, quality, safety and resilience.
The Gulf’s food-security model extends far beyond agriculture. It combines domestic production, technology, storage, logistics and global partnerships into a multi-layered system designed to ensure reliable access to food.

Beyond Dates: What the Gulf Actually Grows
Ask someone what grows in the Gulf and the answer will usually begin and often end with dates.
Yet agriculture across the region is considerably more diverse than many people assume.
Saudi Arabia produces large quantities of tomatoes, cucumbers, potatoes, onions, citrus fruits and watermelons alongside its well-known date industry. Oman grows dates, melons, vegetables and limes, while the cooler highlands of Jabal Akhdar support crops such as grapes, apricots and peaches. Across the UAE, farmers are producing tomatoes, herbs, leafy greens and strawberries despite some of the world’s harshest growing conditions.
Recent food security statistics from Saudi Arabia highlight the scale of progress achieved in selected categories. The Kingdom now reports self-sufficiency levels exceeding 100% in dairy products and eggs, while poultry self-sufficiency has risen above 70%. Figs, eggplants, cucumbers and zucchini stand at over 100%, while potatoes achieved a self-sufficiency rate of 87%, tomatoes 76%, and onions 51%.
These figures challenge the perception that the Gulf relies entirely on imported food. At the same time, they reveal something equally important: the region is selective about what it chooses to produce locally.
The Cereal Challenge
Despite significant progress in selected categories, cereals remain the defining constraint.
The GCC continues to import the overwhelming majority of its wheat, rice, corn and feed grains. Unlike vegetables, poultry or dairy, these crops require vast quantities of land and water and are difficult to produce competitively in arid environments.
Rather than attempting to become self-sufficient in every category, Gulf countries have increasingly focused on producing what can be grown efficiently while relying on global markets for products where domestic production makes less economic sense.
The result is a more pragmatic approach to food security: one based on resilience rather than complete self-sufficiency.
Technology Is Expanding the Possibilities
Technology is nevertheless changing what can be grown locally.
One of the most striking examples is Bustanica in Dubai. Covering approximately 330,000 square feet, it is the world’s largest indoor vertical farm, producing more than one million kilograms of leafy greens annually while using a fraction of the water required by conventional agriculture. A subsidiary of Emirates Flight Catering (EKFC), Bustanica supplies not only to the airline but also to local supermarkets across the UAE.
Across the region, investments in hydroponics, climate-controlled greenhouses, vertical farming and precision irrigation are helping farmers improve yields while reducing water consumption. Companies such as Pure Harvest have demonstrated how advanced greenhouse technology can support year-round vegetable production despite summer temperatures that regularly exceed 45°C.
These initiatives are not designed to eliminate imports. Rather, they expand domestic production in categories where technology can help overcome some of the Gulf’s natural constraints while strengthening overall food-system resilience.
The Dairy Paradox
The dairy sector provides one of the clearest examples of both the Gulf’s success and its limitations.
Over the past decade, Gulf countries have significantly expanded domestic dairy production. Saudi Arabia’s large-scale dairy industry has become a regional success story, while Qatar rapidly increased local dairy production following the 2017 blockade.
Yet the story does not end there. While milk may be produced locally, a significant portion of the animal feed used to support dairy production continues to be imported from overseas markets. In other words, the dependency has not truly disappeared.
Instead, the Gulf is increasingly producing higher-value food products domestically while continuing to rely on global agricultural supply chains for key inputs. This distinction highlights why food security cannot be measured solely by domestic production figures.
Building Food Security Beyond the Farm
The Gulf’s food-security strategy extends far beyond agriculture.
Over the past two decades, governments across the region have invested heavily in strategic food reserves, grain silos, storage infrastructure and cold-chain logistics with an objective to ensure that food remains available even when supply chains are disrupted.
Events ranging from the Covid-19 pandemic to the Ukraine conflict and disruptions in regional shipping routes have reinforced the importance of maintaining adequate reserves and diversified supply channels.
At the same time, the Gulf has invested heavily in logistics infrastructure. Ports such as Jebel Ali, Khalifa Port, Hamad Port and Sohar Port have become critical gateways for food imports, supported by extensive warehousing and distribution networks.
Food security, in this sense, begins long before food reaches supermarket shelves.
Extending the Food System Beyond the Gulf
The region’s food-security strategy also extends beyond its borders.
Over the years, Gulf governments, sovereign entities and private investors have pursued agricultural partnerships and farmland investments in countries including Sudan, Egypt, Pakistan and elsewhere.
These initiatives form part of a broader effort to secure long-term access to agricultural production and supply chains. The objective is to ensure reliable access to food through diversified sourcing, strategic partnerships and greater control over critical supply networks.
The Gulf’s food system therefore stretches far beyond the Gulf itself.
A Portfolio, Not a Farm
The Gulf’s food-security model is often viewed through the narrow lens of agriculture yet the region’s approach is far broader.
Domestic food production is one component. Technology is another. Strategic reserves, logistics infrastructure, diversified imports and overseas agricultural partnerships are equally important.
The Gulf’s food-security strategy increasingly resembles a portfolio rather than a farm.
Some food is produced locally. Some is sourced globally. Some is secured through long-term partnerships and overseas investments. Technology improves resilience, while logistics ensure availability.
Conclusion
The Gulf has not become food self-sufficient, nor is it likely to do so. Its climate, water resources and geography impose limits that even the most advanced technology cannot fully overcome.
Yet the region’s experience demonstrates that food security and food self-sufficiency are not the same thing. Rather than attempting to grow everything it consumes, the Gulf has built a multi-layered system that combines selective domestic production, food technology, strategic reserves, global trade, logistics infrastructure and overseas partnerships.
The result is a region that remains highly import dependent yet increasingly food secure.
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