Saturday 6 May 2023

Trade between Iran and Turkey reported at US$1.379 billion for Jan-Mar 2023 quarter

The value of trade between Iran and Turkey has been reported at US$1.379 billion during the first quarter of 2023, down 14% from US$1.619 billion in the first three months of 2022, according to the figures recently released by the Turkish Statistical Institute.

Turkey’s export to Iran rose 2% to US$702 million in the three-month period of this year, from $682 million in the same period of the previous year.

Iran’s three-month export to Turkey declined 27% to US$677 million from US$932 million.

Based on the data released by the Turkish Statistical Institute the value of Iran’s exports to Turkey increased by 19% to US$3.35 billion in 2022.

Turkey had imported over US$2.82 billion worth of commodities from the Islamic Republic in 2021.

Based on the mentioned data, Iran’s imports from the country also marked an 11% rise to US$3.07 billion in the past year, in comparison with 2021, when the figure was US$2.77 billion.

Trade between the two countries has registered a 15-percent rise in 2022.

The value of trade between the two neighbors reached US$6.42 billion in 2022, while the figure stood at US$5.59 billion in the preceding year.

Iran's trade balance with Turkey has been US$280 million positive in favor of Iran in the past year.

As announced by an official with Iran’s Trade Promotion Organization (TPO), the value of Iran’s export to Turkey increased by 23% in the past Iranian calendar year 1401.

Farzad Piltan, the director-general of TPO's Office of West Asian Countries, said that based on the data released by the Islamic Republic of Iran Customs Administration (IRICA), Iran exported commodities worth $7.45 billion to its neighbor in 1401, while the figure was $6.079 in 1400.

Saying that Turkey was Iran’s third top export destination in the past year, the official named natural gas, aluminum, urea, polyethylene, copper cathode and cathode parts, copper wires, iron and steel ingots, and polyethylene as the major products Iran exported to Turkey in the previous year.

Piltan further announced that Iran’s import from Turkey also rose 15 percent to about $6 billion in 1401, from $5.2 billion in 1400.

Stating that Turkey was the third source of import for Iran in the previous year, the official named sunflower seed oil, road tractors, corn, bananas, generators, barley, soybeans, synthetic fibers, crude soybean oil, and solid acrylic polymers as the main items Iran imported from its neighbor in 1401.

In last July, Iran and Turkey discussed ways of expanding economic relations along with political ties at the Turkish-Iranian High-Level Cooperation Council in Tehran.

During the meeting, which was co-chaired by Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi and Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, the two sides negotiated the extension of the gas export contract between the two sides for the next 25 years.

In the meeting, President Raisi noted that the Islamic Republic of Iran is determined to expand economic relations with neighboring countries.

The president also evaluated Tehran-Ankara ties as positive and progressive, saying that the two countries should pursue appropriate policies to move towards increasing their annual trade exchanges to $30 billion.

On the sidelines of the mentioned meeting, Iranian Energy Minister Ali-Akbar Mehrabian also held talks with Turkish Minister of Energy and Natural Resources Fatih Dönmez in which the two sides exchanged views on cooperation in energy fields.

Later on, Head of Turkey’s Small and Medium Enterprises Development Organization (KOSGEB) Hasan Basri Kurt met with Head of Iran Small Industries and Industrial Parks Organization (ISIPO) Ali Rasoulian to discuss ways of expanding cooperation between the small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) of the two countries.

In this meeting Rasoulian referred to the signing of a memorandum of understanding (MOU) between the two countries on cooperation between SMEs, saying: “President Raisi has emphasized setting up joint industrial parks in the country’s special economic zones, considering the good infrastructure for setting up such parks in the free and special economic zones and the active presence of economic enterprises in these areas.”

 

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