King Mohammed VI asked not to undergo Muslim rituals to kill sheep during Eid al-Adha this year because of a sharp leakage of the crowd.
Disadvantages are blamed for seven years of drought.
Eid al-Adha, who fell in June, celebrated the Prophet Ibrahim, or Abraham’s willingness to offer his son to God’s order.
Muslims mark the incident by killing sheep or other animals and meat shared by the family and donated to the poor.
But the herds of Morocco has worsened 38% in a decade because of dry pastures, according to official data.
Meat prices are rocketing, and 100,000 sheep are imported from Australia.
Conducting the ritual “under these difficult situations caused many damage to many parts of our people, especially those with limited income,” as a language read by religious activities on Wednesday.
Her father Hassan II, made the same appeal back in 1966 when Morocco also suffered a long drought.
Explaining the challenge of a recent interview, the Minister of Agriculture Morocco, Ahmed Bouari, said “The need to drive strict regulations and rationing in water”.
Tax and VAT imports of cattle, sheep, camel and red meat have just been lifted to help prevent morocco prices.