Close
Home
Help
Library
Login
FAO Staff Login
Register
0
Selected
Invert selection
Deselect all
Deselect all
Click here to refresh results
Click here to refresh results
Digital Asset Management (DAM) by Orange Logic
Go to Login page
Hide details
Explore More Collections
Alternative Versions
Conceptually similar
SYRIA 2025. Farmers in Syria face dry winter season
SYRIA 2025. Farmers in Syria face dry winter season
SYRIA 2025. Farmers in Syria face dry winter season
SYRIA 2025. Farmers in Syria face dry winter season
SYRIA 2025. Farmers in Syria face dry winter season
SYRIA 2025. Farmers in Syria face dry winter season
SYRIA 2025. Impact of drought on wheat crops
SYRIA 2025. Impact of drought on wheat crops
ETHIOPIA 2010. FAO-EU Project in Ethiopia
SYRIA 2025 - FAO Deputy Director-General Maurizio Martina official travel to Syria .
ETHIOPIA 2010. FAO-EU Project in Ethiopia
ETHIOPIA 2010. FAO-EU Project in Ethiopia
KENYA 2011. Horn of Africa Crisis
KENYA 2011. Horn of Africa Crisis
SYRIA 2025 - FAO Deputy Director-General Maurizio Martina official travel to Syria .
KENYA 2011. Horn of Africa Crisis
Yemen. Dry river bed
ETHIOPIA 2010. FAO-EU Project in Ethiopia
ETHIOPIA 2010. FAO-EU Project in Ethiopia
ETHIOPIA 2010. FAO-EU Project in Ethiopia
Similar tones
View images with similar tones
Add to collection
SYRIA 2025. Farmers in Syria face dry winter season
4 November 2025. Salameya, the Syrian Arab Republic. Salameya – Rural Hama – A dry farmland devastated by the most severe drought in four decades. The prolonged drought conditions have severely impacted agricultural production for the 2024/25 season, threatening thousands of farmers’ only source of livelihood and jeopardizing their ability to plant winter crops for the coming season.
11/04/2025
Country or Territory
Syria
Credit
©FAO/Bayan Ksiebi
File size
9.89 MB
Unique ID
UF1B7G9
Editorial use only. Photo credit must be given. For further information contact: Photo-Library@fao.org or digital-media-hub@fao.org
Background Information
The vulnerable farmers across the Syrian Arab Republic have faced this year the most severe drought for four decades, affecting harshly their winter crop production (2024-25: wheat, barley and other) by more than 50 percent decline comparing to pre-crisis levels. Now that farmers are preparing for cultivation season 2025-26, they worry about lower rates of rainfall and limited access to water resources, forcing them to either seek costly alternatives to save their only source of livelihoods, or to abandon farming activities to find any other work opportunities.