Breadbasket


The breadbasket of a country or of a region is an area which, because of the richness of the soil and/or advantageous climate, produces large quantities of wheat or other grain. Rice bowl is a similar term used to refer to Southeast Asia; California's Salinas Valley is sometimes referred to as America's salad bowl. Such regions may be the subject of fierce political disputes, which may even escalate into full military conflicts.
Breadbaskets have become important within the global food system by concentrating global food-production in a small number of countries and, in countries such as India, in small geographic regions. As climate change increases weather variability around the world, the likelihood of multiple breadbaskets failing at a time increases dramatically. The 2022 food crises has been in part facilitated by a series of failures in key breadbasket regions, and the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine has created significant potential disruption of the respective breadbasket regions that are important for global wheat and oil seed production.

History

Classical antiquity

and the province of Africa were considered the breadbaskets of the Roman Republic. Later, in the imperial era, Hispania was considered the "breadbasket of Rome." Strabo mentions that "Turdetania is wonderfully fertile, it has all kinds of fruits and very abundant", and that together with province of Egypt, they are the most productive territories in the known world. Crimea was the source of a large amount of grain supplied to the Greek city-states, especially Athens.

Africa

In South Africa, the Free State province is often considered the country's breadbasket due to its wheat, sunflower, and maize fields. The Overberg region in the Western Cape is also known as the breadbasket of South Africa due to its large wheat fields, as well as fruit growing.
Zimbabwe, formerly known as Rhodesia, was known as the breadbasket of Africa until 2000, exporting wheat, tobacco, and maize to the wider world, especially to other African nations. However today, Zimbabwe, is a net importer of foodstuffs from the Western World.

Morocco

Since subsistence agriculture was the dominant economic system in most of Morocco's history, it's difficult to speak of a breadbasket region. All regions produced their own wheat and barley to feed themselves and their livestock. With the European commercial penetration in the second half of the 19th century, Morocco started to export wheat to Europe despite the objection of the ulama. The Chaouia and Doukkala plains became the most important suppliers of wheat for export. This is logical given their proximity to the coast. The ports of Casablanca and Feddala, today's Mohammedia, serviced the Chaouia Plain while the port of Mazagan serviced Doukkala.
After Morocco's independence, agriculture in Doukkala became geared toward irrigation so less area has been devoted to wheat, whereas Chaouia maintained its status as a major wheat-producing region thanks to its dark soil called tirs and relatively abundant rainfall.

Asia

StateBreadbasket / Ricebowl
CambodiaBattambang Province was coined as the rice bowl of Cambodia due to the region's fertile fields.
ChinaSichuan has historically been known as the "province of abundance" due to its historical agricultural prowess. The regions on the banks of the Yellow River and Yangtze River such as Henan, southern Jiangsu and Zhejiang have also been known for their rich fertility.
Northeast China, particularly the colder northern region, was once known as the "Great Northern Wilderness" due to its scarcity of population before mass migration of Han Chinese into the region during the late 19th century. However, during the Japanese occupation and the puppet state Manchukuo, farming proliferated to feed the Japanese military provisions. After the establishment of the People's Republic of China, further migration and population growth ensued during the latter half of the 20th century, and industrial farming is practiced extensively over the region's fertile black soil, turning the Northeast into the "Great Northern Granary" that produce many times the crop yields needed for local consumption.
IndiaUttar Pradesh and Punjab along with Haryana is considered the breadbasket of India.
West Bengal and Uttar Pradesh and Andhra Pradesh along with Telangana are said to be the "rice bowl" of India.
IndonesiaThe plains of Java are considered the rice bowls of Indonesia.
Korea, SouthThe Honam region, which is most commonly defined by Jeolla Province, has been considered throughout the peninsula's pre-divided history and is considered the breadbasket of the country due to its agricultural significance and geographical fertility. Notably, the region is home to the renowned Jeonju Bibimbap.
Korea, NorthThe plains defined by Hwanghae Province are considered the breadbasket of the nation due to its geographical significance.
MalaysiaKedah is considered the rice bowl of Malaysia, accounting for about half of Malaysia's total production of rice. In 2008, the government of Kedah banned the conversion of paddy fields to housing and industrial lots to protect the rice industry.
MyanmarThe Irrawaddy Delta in Myanmar used to be one of the most important sources of rice in the region until its production declined due to various reasons, including the country's unstable political situation.
PakistanThe Punjab province is considered the breadbasket of Pakistan.
PhilippinesThe province of Nueva Ecija, found on Luzon island, is considered the rice granary of the Philippines because of the vast tracts of land used for rice production.
The island of Mindanao is known as the country's food basket.
SyriaThe Al-Jazira area in northwestern Syria, and its Euphrates basin is considered the country's breadbasket due to its abundance of wheat.
ThailandThe Chao Phraya delta is considered the rice bowl of Thailand.
VietnamThe Mekong delta in Vietnam is considered the country's rice bowl.

Europe

StateBreadbasket / Ricebowl
BulgariaSouthern Dobruja, a fertile plain region in Bulgaria's northeast between the Danube and the Black Sea, is commonly considered the country's breadbasket.
CyprusThe central plain called Mesaoria surrounding the capital Nicosia has long served as the island's granary.
FinlandThe regions of Southwest Finland and Uusimaa, have the warmest climatic conditions in continental Finland and fertile soil thanks to their southern location, making them the breadbaskets of Finland.
FranceThe Beauce plains are considered the breadbasket of France.
GermanyEast Prussia was considered as the breadbasket of the German Reich.
HungaryThe Hungarian Plain has produced significant amounts of grain and maize. In the early 20th century, 34% of Europe's total maize production and 11% of the European flour production was grown in Hungary.
IrelandThe eastern half of Ireland is the traditional breadbasket of the country, with the western part being used for pasture. In the 18th and early 19th centuries, Ireland was itself the breadbasket of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, with Irish grain feeding Britain's industrial cities while Irish peasants subsisted on potatoes. This would lead to the Great Famine of the 1840s.
ItalyBoth Po Valley and Apulia are considered the breadbasket of Italy.
LatviaSemigallia is considered the breadbasket of Latvia.
PortugalThe Alentejo is a flat and fertile region because it is located between the Tagus and Guadiana rivers. Due to this and its proximity to Lisbon, it has been considered “the breadbasket of Portugal” for centuries. Already in a document from 1639, written by Dom Agostinho Manuel de Vasconcelos, the "Province of Alentejo" is described as "the most fertile granary of that Kingdom." In 1833, the writer Don José Muñoz Maldonado published a book about the Peninsular War in which he also described "the fertile province of Alentejo, called the breadbasket of Portugal for its abundance."
RomaniaIn the 19th century, Romania was considered part of Europe's breadbasket.
RussiaThere is the Central Black Earth Region in Russia proper.
SerbiaVojvodina was considered the breadbasket of Serbia. About 70% of its agricultural products are corn, 20% industrial herbs, and 10% other agricultural cultures.
SpainHistorically, the southern region of Andalusia has been considered "the breadbasket of Spain." The conquest of Andalusia not only marked the success of the Reconquista, but also provided the Hispanic Monarchy with the most fertile and productive agricultural region in Iberia: the Guadalquivir Valley.
With the well-deserved nickname of the granero de España, the accession of the great Andalusian valley meant the assurance of cereal supplies, especially wheat, but also olive trees, vineyards, orange trees, sugar cane, etc. to which corn, strawberries, lemons, rice, etc. would later be added. In 1826, Alexandre de Laborde commented: "Andalusia is so abundant in wheat that it is rightly called 'the breadbasket of Spain,' in terms of harvesting twice as much as its consumption. Andalusia produces many exquisite wines, which is why they are regarded as the most valuable winery in Spain In the kingdoms of Granada and Seville the vines are quite abundant The olive harvest is so rich as prodigious in the four kingdoms of Andalusia."
In irrigated lands, the orchards of Valencia and Murcia also stand out, since it has always been said that in Spain there were only two orchards, that of Valencia and that of Murcia. The autonomous community of Castile and León has also been considered the breadbasket of Spain, since large quantities of cereals are grown on its lands, mainly in addition to vineyards and legumes. Almería, with its sea of plastic, is considered the “garden of Europe”.
SloveniaIn the 18th century, there were plans to drain the Ljubljana Marsh and transform it into the breadbasket of Carniola.
SwedenScania is considered the breadbasket of Sweden. The yield per unit area is higher than in any other region in Sweden and the soil is among the most fertile in the world. The Scanian plains are an important resource for the rest of Sweden since 25–95% of the total production of various types of cereals come from the region.
TurkeyAegean Region, Marmara region and Central Anatolia are considered the breadbasket of Turkey. Aegean Region and Marmara region are famous for cultivation of olive trees, fruit cultivation and vegetable cultivations. Central Anatolia is famous for grain cultivation as such as wheat, maize, sunflowers and barley.
UkraineUkraine has long been known as the breadbasket of Europe. When it was part of the Soviet Union, it had been known as the breadbasket of the Soviet Union.
United KingdomThe East Anglia area of the East of England, Southeast England, East Midlands, West Midlands, Yorkshire and the Humber in England and Scottish Lowlands are sometimes referred to as "Britain’s breadbasket" where a combination of climate, landscape and soils are well suited to growing wheat. The East Anglia area of the East of England in 2010 was sufficient to produce 5,774 million loaves of bread. In mediæval Wales, the Isle of Anglesey was so considered, that alone it can "provide a requisite quantity of corn for all the inhabitants".