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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsThe U.S.-Iran Pistachio War Is Heating Up
Forty years of vicious geopolitical competition between the U.S. and Iran came close to open war in January, and its still too soon to call a winnerexcept in one field. American farmers have deposed Iran as king of the global pistachio industry, benefiting from U.S. policies hostile to Tehran, climate change, and egregious failures of economic and water management that have sucked the Islamic Republics lakes and aquifers dry. The country is unlikely ever to recover its pistachio crown, spawning a race among other producers to grow the nut and fill the gap created by its defeat. In the reductionist language of President Trump, Iran lost big.
Thats more shocking than it sounds. Persia enjoyed a virtual monopoly on cultivating the hardy yet demanding pistachio tree for at least 1,000 years. Exports followed in the footsteps of Islams conquering armies from the seventh century on. Giving pistachio farmers more access to land and water was a core offer of the 1979 revolution, and the countrys new ruling classin particular the family of former President Hashemi Rafsanjanisaw the hard currency potential. The country devoted ever more land to growing the fatty green nut and replaced the ancient Qanat system of subsoil canals that fed the crop with higher-volume water pumps. Harvests boomed, even through the chaos of the 1980-88 Iran-Iraq war.
Yet the U.S., which started to produce pistachios only in 1976, has now overtaken Iran as the worlds leading producer. Catching up took a while, and picking the one moment of victory is hard, as pistachio harvests can be volatile, alternating between fat and lean years. But from 2004 to 2009, the Islamic Republic still accounted for 40% of global production on average, followed by the U.S. at 33%. By 2014-19, those positions were reversed: 47% of the global total came from the U.S., and 27% from Iran. A catastrophic 2018-19 season briefly pulled Irans share as low as 7%.
That collapse had a big impact within Iran, where pistachio nuts arent just a $1 billion-plus export earner but a key ingredient in the national cuisine, an accessible luxury, and a point of national pride. The dearth of harvests has led to a kind of despair. Be mindful when having pistachios at a party, goes a popular joke thats been making the rounds in Tehran. The host will be keeping track of every single one guests eat. Entire pistachio groves have bleached and died for lack of water as overtaxed wells dry out. Sinkholes have opened as soil collapses into the fallen water table.
https://www.msn.com/en-us/money/markets/the-us-iran-pistachio-war-is-heating-up/ar-BB10eCh4?ocid=hplocalnews
Xipe Totec
(43,888 posts)From the Dinosaur Series:
A news bulletin announces a nationwide shortage of pistachio nuts, which is blamed on the four legged dinosaurs. War breaks out between the two-leggers and four-leggers and Robbie and Spike are drafted into the battle. Earl supports the fight at first but questions how truthful the government is being with them after a news reporter mistakenly reveals all is not going as well as planned.
https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0560707/plotsummary?ref_=tt_ov_pl
TheBlackAdder
(28,160 posts)dewsgirl
(14,961 posts)hunter
(38,301 posts)It doesn't matter how much water Trump and his allies try to grab. If there's no snow on the mountains, there's no water. It won't matter how many dams we build, or how many environmental protections Trump rescinds.
The problems in Iran are similar.
If humans can't quit burning fossil fuels, and if we can't stabilize our population, our world economy will collapse.
abqtommy
(14,118 posts)wound up sick as a dog. She never touched another pistachio at least for as long as we were
married. Too bad, she could've boosted growers' incomes otherwise. I'm told that the middle east
is also the original source for apples and apricots, among other food crops.