For Free Headlines Submit Your Email
Saturday, December 28, 2024 1:29 GMT
Iran has exported over US$78 million of pistachios to the European Union (EU) member states during the first half of 2022, IRIB reported citing the data released by the European Union's statistics office, Eurostat. Iran’s pistachio export to the union has dropped 26% in the first six months of this year, from US$106.1 million in the same period of time in the past year, the Eurostat data indicate. Although Iran is mostly known for its vast hydrocarbon resources, there are some other precious products that people all around the world put the Iranian brand on and appreciate greatly, one of such products is Iranian “green gold” or pistachio.Cultivation of pistachios in Iran dates back to the Achaemenid period or the fifth century B.C; Like the great dynasty, the Islamic Republic was the world’s unrivaled, leading producer of pistachios for a long time, with southeastern Kerman province being the hub of production for so-called green gold.Over the past decade, climate change has caused severe drought in Iran, leading to 85% of the country being classified as arid or semi-arid. The decline in annual average rainfall and shortage of surface water has forced farmers to dig more wells to pump water from underground reserves. Nearly half of the 750,000 wells dug in Iranian farms are illegal, which indicates why the unconstrained use of underground water in agriculture is the main source of water waste in the country.The situation is the same in Kerman province, which accounts for 70% of Iran’s pistachio production. As announced by Hossein Rezaei, the secretary-general of the Iran Pistachio Association (IPA), the production of pistachio in Iran fell by 70,000 tons in the previous Iranian calendar year (ended on March 20) to hover around 150,000 tons. Hossein Rezaei said that the current year's sprouts have also been destroyed by climate change, and this year it is difficult to keep the market, so government support is required. - Tehran Times