Syrian Drought Puts Assad’s ‘Year of Wheat’ in Peril
The “year of wheat” campaign pushed by Syrian President Bashar al-Assad is in jeopardy after low rainfall risked leaving an import gap of at least 1.5 million tons, according to preliminary estimates by officials and experts.
The agricultural blow and lack of
funds to finance the imports will add to pressure on a Syrian economy already
reeling from ten years of conflict and buckling under the pressure of US
sanctions, neighboring Lebanon’s financial collapse and the COVID-19 pandemic.
Russia, one of the world’s largest
exporters of wheat and Assad’s staunch ally, has said it would sell one million
tons of grain to Syria throughout the year to help it meet the four million
tons of annual domestic demand.
But its cargoes have been slow to
arrive in recent years as funds grew scarce, with publicly available customs
data showing no significant supplies to Syria.
Officials and an expert at the
Rome-based Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) estimated at least 1.5
million tons of wheat imports were needed. They said a 1.2-million-ton
government purchasing target, driven by forced sales to the government, now
looked wildly unrealistic.
Abdullah Khader, 49, a landowner
and farmer in Raqqa province, said the lack of rain meant his crop was almost a
quarter of last year’s. Minister of Agriculture Mohammed Hassan Qatana talked
about the fate of the domestic crop during a tour with his team this week of
the country’s bread basket in the northeast Hasaka province, where much of the
country’s cereals crop is in the hands of breakaway Kurds.
“It’s clear from the tour the huge impact of the
climatic changes, that all rain-fed plantations have been taken out of
investments and even the irrigated wheat areas production has gone down 50%,”
Qatana said. According to two UN experts, that could mean at least half of the
planted acreage of 1.5 million hectares could be wiped out.
Bread shortages
Much of the domestic wheat demand
is needed to support a government bread subsidy program.
Syria’s financial troubles have
already translated into bread shortages in the past year with residents
complaining of long queues across government-controlled areas, in some
instances running up to five hours.
The World Food Program said in
March a record 12.4 million Syrians, more than 60% of the population, suffer
from food insecurity and hunger, double the number seen in 2018.
Syrians are increasingly dependent
on subsidized bread as rampant inflation has driven up food prices more than
200% in the last year, according to the World Bank.
Qatana had appealed to farmers to
prioritize wheat this year so the country could “return to eating what we plant.”
“We are facing endless economic pressures, our
food means our existence,” he told state media in November.
A rise in last year’s harvest had
raised expectations, with an increase of 52% compared to a five-year average,
according to FAO data.
“I sowed my 80 donums (8 hectares), hoping it
will be a good season,” said Mustafa al-Tahan, 36, a farmer in northern Hama
countryside. “I have lost everything and the yields have been very poor with
little rain.”
Kurdish supplies
About 70% of wheat production
still lies outside of government control and its more aggressive position as
sole buyer, forcing it to compete with other bidders by doubling the buying
price this season to 900 Syrian pounds a kilo, or around $300-$320 per ton.
But Damascus is unlikely to get
any supplies from farmers under the Kurdish-led administration in the
northeast, where over 60% of the country’s wheat is grown.
The Kurdish-led autonomous
administration expects to collect around half last year’s 850,000 tons due to
poor rain and lower water levels along the Euphrates banks, which are down by
at least five meters.
Along with higher prices to
farmers that are denominated in dollars to deter them from selling to Damascus,
the self-administration has so far banned any sale outside its territory.
The 1,150 pounds a kilo purchase
price was set substantially higher than the Damascus level to ensure the
northeast administration gets the largest possible quantity to enable
self-sufficiency, Kurdish officials say.
“The season is very bad and will affect severely
food production,” Salman Barudo, who is in charge of grains procurement in the
Kurdish-led autonomous northeast, said.
The Kurdish-led authorities, who have had extensive trade ties with Damascus, have so far rejected Russian mediation to allow farmers to sell part of their produce to Damascus as in previous years, two Kurdish sources said.