Iran exports tea to 23 countries

Atotal of 22,723 tons of tea worth $29.5 million were exported from Iran during the first eight months of the current Iranian year (March 21-Nov. 21), registering a 31.7% rise in value compared with the similar period of last year.

16 December 2022
ID : 44307
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Atotal of 22,723 tons of tea worth $29.5 million were exported from Iran during the first eight months of the current Iranian year (March 21-Nov. 21), registering a 31.7% rise in value compared with the similar period of last year.

Tea leaves harvest in Gilan province in northern Iran. Photo: Tasnim

Atotal of 22,723 tons of tea worth $29.5 million were exported from Iran during the first eight months of the current Iranian year (March 21-Nov. 21), registering a 31.7% rise in value compared with the similar period of last year.

Iranian tea was exported to 23 countries with the main destinations being Uzbekistan, Germany, the UAE, Canada, Ukraine, the Netherlands, Pakistan, and India, IRIB News reported.

A total of 63,593 tons of tea worth $354.7 million were imported from nine countries during the same period.

A temporary ban has been placed on the import of tea and rice from India in a bid to balance Iran’s trade with India, according to Masih Keshavarz, secretary of Iran’s Rice Suppliers Commission.

“The ban will be lifted as soon as bilateral trade is balanced, or registers surplus,” he added.

The comments by Keshavarz came after an Indian English-language business daily The Economic Times reported that Iran has completely stopped signing new contracts for importing tea and basmati rice from India.

The report said a section of traders believes Iranian importers could be delaying purchases, as New Delhi and Tehran are working out a rupee trade settlement agreement. 

The development will have an impact on the export of these commodities, particularly tea, as Iran imports around 30-35 million kg of orthodox tea and about 1.5 million kg of basmati rice from India every year, exporters said. 

While tea exports to Iran had slowed down earlier, buyers from there “stopped registering new contracts from last week,” said Anish Bhansali, managing partner of Bhansali & Company, a leading tea exporter to Iran.

While basmati rice exporters are also facing the same problem, the impact would be less as basmati exports have risen on high demand and rise in prices of commodities globally since the  Russia-Ukraine war.

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