April 23, 2025


Iran's annual wheat harvest likely to fall due to unfavourable weather

 
 

 

Iran expects a major drop in its annual wheat harvest due to unfavorable weather conditions.

 

Officials from the Iranian ministry of agriculture said on April 20 that the country's wheat harvest could amount to 9-11 million metric tons (mt) this year, down from the 16 million mt reported last year.

 

Mohammad Reza Talayi, a deputy agriculture minister, said that lower precipitation had caused a major decline in the yields of dry-land farms across Iran. He said, however, that the western and northwestern provinces in Iran, where wheat is harvested in late summer, could experience better yields because of recent increases in rainfall.

 

The comments came after Gholamreza Golmohammadi, another deputy agriculture minister, said on April 19 that this year's wheat crops in Iran could fall to as low as eight million mt. That means that Iran should import up to six million mt of the grain to respond to a rising domestic demand which has been exacerbated by cheap prices.

 

Iran spent more than $3 billion last year to buy nearly 12 million mt of wheat from its farmers.

 

The bumper crop enabled the government to declare self-sufficiency in wheat production and stop placing orders for sizable shipments of the crop from countries like Russia.

 

That comes as Iran had cut its annual wheat imports by seven million mt to 1.8 million mt in the calendar year to late March 2024.

 

Iran has already started this year's wheat purchase programme in five provinces in the country's south.

 

The Government Trading Corporation said on Aporil 20 that the government expects to buy wheat from more than 814,000 farmers until September, when the harvesting season ends in the country.

 

- Press TV

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