Two listed Saudi companies plan to invest in either farming or agri-business abroad under a state-sponsored plan to ensure steady food supplies. Saudi Arabia has urged companies to invest in farm projects abroad after deciding last year to reduce wheat production by 12.5 percent per year. Tabuk Agricultural Development Co. (Tadco) is “looking into joint-venture proposals from firms abroad and mulls relocating some of its activities to countries offering comparative incentives for investment,” it said in its annual report published over the weekend. The company produced about 51,000 tonnes of wheat, about 63,000 tonnes of livestock feed and about 38,000 tonnes of other farm products such as potatoes, onions and fruits, data from the report showed. Another company, Aljouf Agricultural Co., said its board of directors had recommended investments in agricultural projects or agri-business industries abroad. Aljouf produced 119,000 tonnes of wheat and some 32,000 tonnes of livestock feed and about 50,000 tonnes of fruits and vegetables in 2008, according to its annual report. The largest listed agri-business company by turnover, National Agricultural Development Co. (Nadec), has not mentioned in its annual report any future plans to invest abroad. Nadec produced 150,000 tonnes of wheat in 2008 but contrary to other agricultural companies its business is more focused on the production of dairy and juices, which accounted for about 70 percent of its turnover in 2008, against 16.6 percent for grains. The firm will instead focus on boosting the number of its cattle to and start a cheese plant in 2009, it said in its annual report. Hail Agricultural Development Co. (Hadco) last month said it would invest about $45.3 million in the next two years developing 22,830 acres (9,239 hectares) of farmland in northern Sudan and will look at investing also in Turkey and Kazakhstan. State-owned Saudi Industrial Development Fund is granting financing facilities to firms exploring agricultural investments abroad. It has agreed to contribute about 60 percent of the cost of Hadco's project in Sudan. The world's largest oil exporter said in January it had received the first batch of rice to be produced abroad by local investors as part of the King Abdullah Initiative for Saudi Agricultural Investment Abroad. A food security panel, affiliated to Riyadh's Chamber of Commerce and Industry, has identified wheat, barley, corn, soybean, maize, rice and sugar among strategic crops that should constitute priorities for foreign investments, a spokesman said.