For Free Headlines Submit Your Email
Thursday, April 25, 2024 23:19 GMT
Iran’s wheat purchases from local farmers rose 55.2% from the prior year’s total procurement, boosting stocks at government granaries at a time of surging prices that have sent flour costs sharply higher. The Government Trading Corporation (GTC), which is responsible for staple supplies in Iran, purchased 7.3 million tons of wheat in the five months since late March which is generally the harvest season in Iran, figures released by Iran’s Ministry of Industry, Mine and Trade showed, Press TV wrote.“In the first five months of [the Iranian year of] 1401, about 7.3 million tons of wheat were purchased by the Government Trading Corporation of Iran, which is 55.2% higher in terms of quantity and 256% up in terms of value compared to the same period last year,” it said. Purchases of wheat at a state-set guaranteed price are the key plank of Iran’s self-sufficiency drive in the strategic staple food. However, the former government’s reluctance to raise its prices in accordance with inflation rates dissuaded many wheat growers from selling their produce to the state.As a result, the Rohani administration imported more than three million tons of wheat at a cost of US$3.8 billion in 2020. For the fiscal year of 2021, Iran ran on a shortage of 30% which meant the country had to import 5-6 million tons of wheat, according to officials. To put this into perspective, the government bought 11.5 million tons of wheat from local farmers in 2019 when the country celebrated self-sufficiency in the food for the fourth year in a row.Wheat is Iran's most important crop, accounting for about half of its cultivated acreage and 70% of its grain output. The country is estimated to consume around 15.5 million tons of wheat a year, but supplies have varied over years due to erratic domestic production. The bulk of the crop depends on seasonal precipitation, where irrigated wheat covers only one-third of the total area of 6.5 million hectares used for harvest, making yields subject to cycles of boom and bust.The global food market is facing a serious challenge from the ongoing conflict in Ukraine which is the fifth largest exporter of wheat. Russia is the world's largest wheat exporter, accounting for 18% of global shipments. Russia and Ukraine which respectively produced 38 million tons and 22 million tons of global wheat supply last year have reduced their wheat supply by 30 million tons this year, leading to a steep rise in prices. Economists say the West’s imposition of more sanctions on Russia has intensified the rise in prices for energy and food products, especially wheat. - Iran Daily