Agriculture remains central to Albania’s rural economy, but many rural communities continue to face challenges such as digital exclusion, limited access to technology, and changing labour market demands. To address these issues, the Digital Agriculture and Rural Transformation in Albania (DART) project is combining digital innovation with skills development and institutional support to help rural communities adapt and benefit from a more modern agricultural sector.
The DART project is being implemented by the International Labour Organization (ILO) in partnership with the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) and the International Telecommunication Union (ITU). It was recently highlighted at the ILO Innovation Day as an example of how transformative ideas can reshape the future of work. The initiative introduces advanced technologies into agriculture while focusing on digital empowerment as a pathway out of poverty and toward decent and productive employment in rural areas.
Rather than focusing only on technology, the project takes a broader systemic approach by linking digital transformation with skills development at multiple levels. At the policy level, it supports strategies based on labour market needs, skills forecasting, and collaboration between government, employers, and workers. At the institutional level, it is strengthening the ability of education and training providers, Sector Skills Committees, and agricultural agencies to respond to technological change. At the individual level, it works directly with farmers, young people, and rural workers to build practical digital agriculture skills.
The project also places strong emphasis on inclusion. It promotes gender equality, supports the participation of persons with disabilities, and seeks to expand access to productive employment opportunities across Albania. This inclusive focus is intended to ensure that the benefits of digital transformation in agriculture are shared more widely and contribute to more equitable rural development.
A major part of the initiative involves improving Albania’s national digital platform for farmers. The upgraded platform brings together soil and climate data, training materials, market information, and funding opportunities into a single digital service portal. This integrated approach is designed to make it easier for rural communities to access the information and resources they need to improve productivity and livelihoods.
Early results from the DART project are already becoming visible. Public administration officials have improved their digital capacities through training and more efficient local e-governance systems. At the same time, education and training institutions are being equipped with advanced tools such as soil sensors, animal haematology analysers, digital endoscopes, virtual reality headsets, and smartboards, helping align agricultural education with current labour market needs and benefiting hundreds of students.
These changes are also helping shift perceptions of agriculture in rural Albania. Instead of being seen only as manual labour, agriculture is increasingly being taught and practiced as a technology-enabled sector. This is making the field more attractive to young people, women, and rural workers by positioning digital agriculture as a route to decent work and better economic opportunities rather than a last-resort livelihood.
Overall, the DART project reflects the ILO’s human-centred approach to the future of work by linking innovation with lifelong learning, social dialogue, and a just transition toward smarter and more resource-efficient agriculture. As Albania continues aligning its national strategies with international labour standards, European Union requirements, and the Sustainable Development Goals, the project is emerging as a practical model for how digital agriculture can strengthen rural livelihoods, promote inclusion, and ensure that rural communities are not left behind in the digital age.







