!!!Landwirtschaft

Agriculture: Agriculture comprises the production of food, fodder, and 
regrowable natural resources, as well as the conservation of land 
developed and cultivated by man (landscape conservation). About 150 
years ago, Austria was still an agrarian country, in which 75 % 
of the population were farmers ( Bauern); in 1961 only 16 % 
earned their livelihood through agriculture. In 1992, 5 % of the 
population and 6,9 % of the gainfully employed belonged to the 
agricultural sector. In the years 1970-1993, the number of farms 
dropped by 70,000 to 267,444. Of these, 149,860 are subsidiary 
enterprises (56.2 %, one of the highest percentages in Europe), 
in which one or both members of the married couple running the farm 
pursue a different full-time occupation; the management of the farm, 
being concentrated in leisure and vacation time, is therefore not 
always optimal. The proportion of the gross domestic product produced 
by agriculture and forestry fell from 16,4 % in 1954 to 
9,7 % in 1963 and to 2,4 % in 1993. In 1992, 31,4 % of 
the gross agricultural production came from crops and 68,6 % from 
livestock.

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In order to satisfy increasing food requirements and compensate for 
the ongoing loss of agricultural production area (approx. 38 ha 
of agriculturally productive land are lost daily to road-building, 
housing, and industrial construction), both area productivity (an 
average of 2,5 % per year) and labour productivity have had to be 
substantially increased. This was achieved through  Land Improvement 
Measures (property consolidation, drainage, construction of freight 
roads, cable railways, etc.), the use of mineral fertilisers, more 
effective pest control, and the utilisation of highly productive types 
of grain. In addition, improved seed was used and crop rotation 
optimised, feeding and production methods were modernised, and precise 
soil management according to an exact schedule introduced on a 
widespread basis. The use of mineral fertilisers has dropped, however; 
the figures for the use of nitrogen fertilisers, phosphorus, and 
potash, indicated as a total of pure nutrients, dropped from 
140 kg/ha of agricultural production area in 1982 to 117 kg 
in 1992. A considerable production increase has been achieved through 
ongoing mechanisation. In 1930, 720 tractors were in use in Austrian 
agriculture, 1,641 in 1939, 78,748 in 1957, and 342,816 in 1993; the 
number of combine harvesters used in the Austrian agricultural sector 
increased from 900 in 1952 to 19,470 in 1993; over 64,000 farms are 
organised into machinery syndicates for better capacity utilisation of 
their farm machines.

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Agricultural production in 1955 was twice as high as in 1937. In 1993 
approximately 81 % (notional figure: 95 %) of Austria's food 
requirements were covered by domestic agriculture (100 % of milk, 
butter, cheese, bread grains, beef, veal, pork, lard, potatoes, and 
sugar; 70 % of vegetables, 41 % of fruit, 83 % of 
poultry, 88 % of eggs, 58 % of vegetable oils).

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In 1993, Austria imported agricultural products worth ATS 
34.4 billion; agricultural exports came to ATS 17.1 billion. 
The most important imports were fruit and vegetables (32.0 %), 
coffee, tea, and chocolate (12.3 %), plant and animal resources 
(9.7 %), and fodder (5.9 %); 60.1 % of the imports came 
from the EU. The most important exports were: livestock and meat 
(17.1 %), beverages (2.3 %), milk products and eggs 
(12.2 %), and grains and their processed products (12.1 %); 
the EU, with 49,2 % was Austria's most important sales market.

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In 1993, a total of ATS 13.1 billion in federal subsidies went to 
the agricultural sector, ATS 1.05 billion of this to  (se)  
Mountain Farmers. The amounts of direct subsidies and equalisation 
payments are constantly changing.

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Production regions: Because of the nature of the land (2.6 % 
lowlands, 5.8 % depressions, 18.4 % hill country, 
16.3 % low mountainous country, 16.9 % mountain regions, 
40,0 % high mountain regions) and climatic conditions, Austria 
was divided into 8 production regions: high Alps (34.8 %), 
pre-Alps (11.1 %), eastern edge of the Alps (transition to 
flatlands, 12.9 %), Waldviertel and Muehlviertel region 
(9.6 %), Carinthian Basin (2.9 %), Alpine foothills 
(11,4 %), southeastern (7.0 %) and northeastern flatlands 
and hill country (10,3 %). Of the entire production area of 
7,513,458 ha in 1993, 3,482,074 ha were agriculturally 
utilised: 18.6 % of this was arable land, 1.3 % gardens, 
orchards, and vineyards, 25.9 % meadows, pastures, and Alpine 
grasslands, 43,1 % areas used for forestry, and 11.1 % 
unproductive land. Of the 1,400,694 ha arable land, Austria has 
about 0.18 ha per capita. Utilisation is divided up as follows: 
fodder grains 35.9 %, bread grains 23.0 %, legumes 
18.1 %, pulse 7.8 %, oil seed plants 7.2 %, root crops 
6.2 %, and other crops 1.8 %.

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Farm sizes: The average size of the 267,444 agricultural enterprises 
in Austria is 12.7 ha per farm, as compared to the EU average of 
13.3 ha (as of 1993).

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The types of farming in Austria include all possible combinations, 
from animal husbandry on grazing land to combined crop and livestock 
farming to general cropping farms, fruit-growing, or wine-growing.

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The farmwork is done for the most part by the farmers' own families. 
In 1951 farm-owners and their families comprised nearly four fifths of 
the 1.6 million persons employed in the agricultural sector (working 
an average of 60-65 hours per week). The proportion of family members 
to outside help changed drastically from 760,000 : 115,000 
in 1964 to 436,000 : 40,100 in 1993.

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Agricultural production has for quite some time been regulated by 
quotas and sales legislation, e.g. for sugar beets, quality wheat, and 
milk. As a member of the EU, Austria is allowed set quotas for sown 
areas or for particular products, which are adequate for grain, milk, 
cattle, and sheep but very restrictive for sugar.

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Regionalisation, and with it specialisation, have taken place in 
agriculture. For cost reasons (expensive special machines or barn 
equipment), farming enterprises often concentrate on the cultivation 
of a single grain or root crop, such as  Maize,  Potatoes, or  Sugar 
Beets, or give preference to the cultivation of pure "combine 
harvester crop succession" ( Cereals, oilseed  Rape,  Sunflowers, 
 Soy Bean, etc.). The production of early potatoes and  Vegetables-is 
concentrated near towns. There are also regional production centres 
for  Fruit Growing. Special crops include, for example  Tobacco 
Cultivation,  hop cultivation, and  Wine Growing.  Organic Farming is 
done according to special directives.

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Livestock production: Cattle breeding is mainly based on grassland and 
field fodder (silage), while other forms of livestock farming are less 
dependent on cultivable acreage. In 1993 there were 2,336,000 cattle 
in Austria (in 1938: 2,578,804), 818,000 of them milk cows with an 
average production of 3997 kg during their 305-day lactation 
period; yearly production comes to 3,270,000 t of cow's milk, of 
which 595,000 t are fed to calves ( Dairy Farming). The average 
number of cattle per farm is 19. - Pig farming is mainly dependent on 
the import of protein concentrate feed: in 1993 there were 3,816,000 
pigs (in 1937: 2,868,148) in Austria. On an average, each farm has 30 
pigs. - The figures for sheep husbandry fluctuate considerably (in 
1938: 315,342 sheep, in 1964: 147,339, in 1993: 333,000,). Goat 
keeping has diminished considerably (in 1938: 349,007 goats, in 1964: 
110,516, in 1993: 46,900). Chicken farming, on the other hand, has 
increased, from 10,625,940 chickens in 1964 to 13,564,000 in 1993; the 
number of turkeys in 1993 was 794.000. - Before motorization began, 
horses were important work animals (246,555 in 1938); following a 
substantial reduction, the number of horses in Austria is now 
increasing again, due to an increase in their use in leisure sports 
(64,000 horses in 1993). Horse breeding is supported by state studs, 
e.g. the stallion centre in Stadl Paura, Upper Austria. - In addition 
to the production of honey, wax, pollen, and royal jelly, the 411,082 
(as of 1993) bee colonies in Austria (in 1937: 455,752) are important 
for the pollination of fruit trees and crops such as rape and 
sunflowers ( Apiarism).

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Modern agricultural history began in Austria around the middle of the 
19%%sup th/%  century; of particular significance was the development 
of  Schools of Agriculture and Forestry. In 1872 the Hochschule fuer 
Bodenkultur ("Higher School of Agricultural Sciences"), now 
the University of Agricultural Sciences was established in Vienna. 
Mechanisation of the agricultural sector began at the end of the 
19%%sup th/%  century. In 1906 an inspection centre for agricultural 
machinery and equipment was established at the research institute of 
the Hochschule fuer Bodenkultur; under the name "Bundesversuchs- 
und Pruefanstalt fuer landwirtschaftliche Maschinen" 
("Federal Experimental and Test Station for Agricultural 
Machines") the institution was moved to Wieselburg (Lower 
Austria) in 1946. In 1798, A. Burg founded the first agricultural 
equipment plant in Vienna; a second plant, founded by P. Jordan, 
followed in Voesendorf in 1813. In 1818 the first iron ploughs were 
manufactured in Waldegg. In 1822 the first exhibition of agricultural 
machines was held in Vienna. Clayton and Shuttleworth began building 
steam-powered threshing machines in 1857, and since 1869 
Hofherr-Schrantz has manufactured mowers in Vienna.

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Around 1880, the first countryside improvement councils 
(Landeskulturraete) and district cooperatives were instituted ( 
Agricultural Cooperatives), from which the  Chambers of Agriculture 
(also referred to as "Bauernkammern", "farmers' 
chambers") proceeded in 1922. At the end of 1933 the Agricultural 
Market of Austria (Agrarmarkt Austria, AMA) took over the role of the 
dairy husbandry fund (Milchwirtschaftsfonds), the grain equalisation 
fund (Getreideausgleichsfonds), and the livestock transport fund 
(Viehverkehrsfonds).

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In 1875 a law was passed instituting measures against the spreading of 
the vine pest and in 1880 a law on epizootic diseases; in 1881 the 
seed inspection institute (Samenkontrollstation) was established in 
Vienna; further important laws were the Kommassationsgesetz 
(amalgamation of pieces of land) and the Bereinigungsgesetz des 
Waldlands von fremden Enklaven (law on the removal of non-forested 
enclaves from forest land) in 1883, the land restoration and torrent 
control law of 1884, and the fisheries act of 1885. In 1889, uniform 
framework legislation relating to the inheritance of farms and forest 
land (Hoeferecht) was passed, although only Carinthia and Tyrol passed 
the requisite provincial laws ( Anerbenrecht). Adherence to the 
wine-growing legislation is monitored by inspectors.

!Literature
L. Loehr, Faustzahlen fuer den Landwirt, 1990; 
Bundesministerium fuer Land- und Forstwirtschaft (Federal Ministry of 
Agriculture and Forestry, ed.), Bericht ueber die Lage der 
oesterreichischen Landwirtschaft, 1993; Oesterreichisches 
Statistisches Zentralamt (ed.), Ergebnisse der 
Landwirtschaftsstatistik im Jahre 1993, 1994.


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