Syria Expects to Halve Wheat Imports after ‘Very Good' Harvest

A Syrian farmer in a wheat field in Afrin on Wednesday. (Getty Images)
A Syrian farmer in a wheat field in Afrin on Wednesday. (Getty Images)
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Syria Expects to Halve Wheat Imports after ‘Very Good' Harvest

A Syrian farmer in a wheat field in Afrin on Wednesday. (Getty Images)
A Syrian farmer in a wheat field in Afrin on Wednesday. (Getty Images)

Syria will import half as much wheat in 2023 as the previous year due to an expected boost in the domestic harvest, Minister of Agriculture Mohammad Hassaan Qatna said on Monday.

Before war erupted in 2011, Syria produced around 4 million tons of wheat yearly, enough to feed itself and export to neighboring countries. But with erratic rainfall patterns and the country's traditional breadbasket in the northeast outside government control, production has been paltry in recent years, said Reuters.

Russia's invasion of Ukraine last year prompted a spike in worldwide grain prices, making Syrian imports more expensive even as Damascus relied more on external sources.

"This year, the rainfall at the beginning of the season was a bit delayed, but all the planned areas were cultivated and the rainfall distribution was good," Qatna told Reuters in an interview in Beirut.

As a result, Qatna said, winter wheat production was "very good" and anticipated imports will be about "50% of what Syria used to import in past years", describing it as "a good achievement".

Last year, Syria imported around 1.5 million tons of wheat, with Russia providing all but a fraction of them, according to Refinitiv data.

Qatna said areas in the north - where Türkiye-backed rebels as well as US-backed Kurdish fighters each control swathes of separate territory – had not been cultivated by the central Syrian authorities.

He declined to provide Reuters with specific figures on production and import.

Qatna said Syria mainly imports wheat from Russia, which has backed the Syrian government militarily and financially.

Russian authorities have not disclosed grain supplies to Syria for a number of years. Last year, Reuters reported that wheat sent to Syria from the Black Sea port of Sevastopol in Crimea increased 17-fold to just over 500,000 tons.



Türkiye Works to Halt Circulation of Fake US Dollars

FILE PHOTO: A money changer counts US dollar bills, with Turkish lira banknotes in the background, at an currency exchange office in central Istanbul, Türkiye, August 21, 2015. REUTERS/Murad Sezer/File Photo
FILE PHOTO: A money changer counts US dollar bills, with Turkish lira banknotes in the background, at an currency exchange office in central Istanbul, Türkiye, August 21, 2015. REUTERS/Murad Sezer/File Photo
TT

Türkiye Works to Halt Circulation of Fake US Dollars

FILE PHOTO: A money changer counts US dollar bills, with Turkish lira banknotes in the background, at an currency exchange office in central Istanbul, Türkiye, August 21, 2015. REUTERS/Murad Sezer/File Photo
FILE PHOTO: A money changer counts US dollar bills, with Turkish lira banknotes in the background, at an currency exchange office in central Istanbul, Türkiye, August 21, 2015. REUTERS/Murad Sezer/File Photo

Turkish authorities were checking currency exchanges and cash dispenser machines on Thursday to help avert any damage from the circulation of counterfeit US dollars, which has prompted a number of banks to stop accepting some of the bills.
The central bank said it was working with judicial authorities to address the counterfeiting issue and had shared a report and guidance with lenders after having examined the fake US banknotes, Reuters reported.
Though it was unclear how much counterfeit currency was in circulation across the country, several banking sources said that several foreign exchange offices and banks were no longer accepting some US dollars.
A source with knowledge of the matter said there were no related problems with the financial system.
Several banking sources have said some $50 bills and $100 bills are suspected of being counterfeit and are not currently detected by money-counting machines.
The Turkish Banking Association said these machines as well as cash dispenser machines, or ATMs, were being checked and updated to halt any further circulation of counterfeit bills.
The source said a planned rapid system-wide update to money-counting machines would make detection possible.
Separately, a prosecutor's office in Istanbul launched an investigation into the issue, broadcaster NTV reported.