Saturday, May 4, 2024

Baghdad

Iraq’s wheat reserves are sufficient until April 2024

 Iraq’s wheat reserves are sufficient until April 2024

A farmer inspects his wheat farm near Sulaimaniyah, Iraq. Photo: AFP/Getty Images

Baghdad (IraqiNews.com) – The spokesperson of the Iraqi Ministry of Trade, Muthanna Jabbar, said on Monday that Iraq’s strategic wheat reserves are sufficient until the end of April 2024.

Jabbar told Reuters that the volume of wheat production is expected to be higher than the previous season; thus, wheat production in 2024 will be approximately 6 million tons, which ensures food security for the country.

The Iraqi Prime Minister, Mohammed Shia Al-Sudani, said last September that Iraq has wheat reserves sufficient for a year after a successful season.

The Iraqi Ministry of Agriculture mentioned earlier that Iraq, where the population is 43 million people, requires between 4.5 million and 5 million tons of wheat every year.

The huge yield produced in 2023 reflects the shift towards cultivating wheat in desert areas using groundwater instead of Iraq’s decreasing river water, as the country is going through the worst drought recorded in its history.

The Iraqi Minister of Agriculture, Abbas Jabr, said last March that wheat production in Iraq is expected to reach four million tons during the 2022–2023 season.

Jabr explained that the increase in production is a result of the government’s plan to cultivate 4,000 square kilometers in desert lands and 2,500 square kilometers in other parts of Iraq.

Iraq was self-sufficient in wheat during the three years before the war in Ukraine, with production of 4.7 million tons in 2019, 6.2 million tons in 2020, and about 4.2 million tons in 2021.

However, factors such as water scarcity and desertification led to a decrease in the local production of wheat, which reached about three million tons last season, prompting the Iraqi government to import wheat to cover the shortfall.

The lack of rain in the winter season constitutes the most significant challenge to the production of agricultural crops in Iraq, including wheat, rice, and barley.