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self sufficiency economy in Iran

https://ifpnews.com/rise-in-irans-sugar-output-saves-1-billion-in-expenses
Rise in Iran’s Sugar Output Saves $1 Billion in Expenses

Caretaker of the Iranian Ministry of Agriculture says a rise in the domestic production of sugar has helped the government save nearly $1 billion in imports from abroad over the past seven years.

Addressing a meeting on the cultivation of spring sugar beet, Abbas Keshavarz said the careful planning and efforts during the past seven years have led to an increase in the domestic production of sugar and helped the country save around $1 billion in imports.

Highlighting the growing transparency in the competition among the local producers of sugar and the government intervention to regulate prices, the caretaker said the domestic farmers have shown more enthusiasm for the cultivation of sugar beet and have also generated more revenue in recent years.

Keshavarz also pointed to the Ministry of Agriculture’s efforts to help farmers get a real price for their products, saying the flooding in the country in the current Iranian year adversely affected the production of sugar beet and led to a rise in the sugar prices.

Sugar beet is a strategic plant that plays a leading role in the production of sugar, forage, and other agricultural produce, he added, and called for efforts to stimulate investment in farming, support the farmers, factories and associations, and to establish processing factories in the areas that are major producers of sugar beet in order to reduce the costs.

https://www.bourseandbazaar.com/new...ts-new-domestic-bond-to-support-manufacturers
Iran Starts New Domestic Bond to Support Manufacturers

Iran has launched a new domestic bond to support manufacturers and non-oil sectors, Central Bank Governor Abdolnaser Hemmati said.


Hemmati said he expects the local bonds, dubbed “Gam,” or “step” in Farsi, will raise 50,000 trillion rials from the first round of issue, the state-run Islamic Republic News Agency reported on Tuesday. That’s equivalent to $11.9 billion, according to the Central Bank of Iran’s official fixed exchange rate, or $3.6 billion on the open, unregulated market.

Four national banks – Melli, Mellat, Tejarat, and Saderat – will use the bonds to finance manufacturing.

“I am confident that the measures taken by the banking system will see growth in the country’s production and economy,” Hemmati said at the launch.

Iran has sought to boost its non-oil sectors after U.S. sanctions drastically reduced crude oil exports.

The loss of revenue from oil exports, Iran’s main source of hard currency, dealt a blow to the currency, fueling inflation and shortages of some imports.'

Hopefully this time they stick to this policy. Haft Tappe project back in 90s was supposed to make Iran a sugar exporter. But then oil and gas projects and their huge income kicked in and everybody forgot about it.
 
News / Economy
Iran bartering medicine for food with South Americans: Deputy minister
Wednesday, 12 February 2020 1:52 PM [ Last Update: Wednesday, 12 February 2020 1:59 PM ]

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Head of Iran’s food and drug agency say the country is bartering Iranian-made medicine for food.
Head of the Food and Drug Administration of Iran says the country is bartering medicine produced in the country with food imported from South America.

Mohammad Reza Shanesaz, a deputy health minister, said on Wednesday that a main aim of the barter program was to help Iranian pharmaceutical companies to thrive by providing them with a broader access to export markets.

“This program allows Iranian medicine to enter various countries and causes exports to boom,” Shanehsaz told the IRNA agency, adding, “Through this, other countries will get to know the quality of medicine purchased from Iran as well as their affordable prices.”

The official said major economies often refuse to allow Iranian pharmaceuticals to become active in their markets because they fear the Iranian-made medicament could be a threat to their own products.

However, he said that the medicine for food barter scheme has been going on for a long period of time now, adding that it has nothing to do with the current state of the Iranian economy where the government is normally forced into barter programs to avoid American sanctions.


Iran unveils biotech treatment for fatal neurological disease
Two Iranian companies have managed to produce a treatment for ALS, a fatal neurological disease.

Iran has become a major pharmaceutical powerhouse in the Western Asia region mainly thanks to a continuous government support that has flown into the sector over the past years.

The support has paid off though as companies have managed to produce some of the highly-needed medicines whose delivery to Iran has been hampered by the US sanctions.

Washington has denied its sanctions have had any impact on import of food and medicine into Iran. However, the US Department of Treasury recently issued a special permission for trade of such humanitarian items with Iran through a new Swiss financial mechanism.
 
News / Economy
Iran’s proven mineral reserves total 50 billion tons: Minister
Wednesday, 12 February 2020 7:16 PM [ Last Update: Wednesday, 12 February 2020 7:23 PM ]

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Iran’s minister of mines says total mineral reserves are now standing at 50 billion metric tons.
Iran has a proven mineral wealth of around 50 billion metric tons, says the country’s minister for industry, mine and trade, as the government makes huge investment to expand the sector to turn it into a major source of earning hard currency.

Reza Rahmani said on Wednesday that discoveries carried out over the past few years had led to a significant increase in Iran’s proven mineral wealth which includes at least 60 different minerals.

Rahmani said that the discoveries had also proved that Iran’s mineral riches were much higher than previously thought, adding that the country has yet to tap into its vast reserves deep underground.

He said that most of the newly-discovered mines contain rich resources of copper, a precious metal which is mostly concentrated in areas in southeast and northwest of Iran.

Iran has seen a surge in its export of metals over the past two years despite a series of American sanctions that have specifically targeted the country’s trade of metals and raw mining products.


Iran’s steel exports soar 93% in Jan. after stiffer US sanctions
Stiffer US sanctions imposed on Iran’s steel industry late last year are failing to impact the sector which saw exports of the strategic metal jump 93 percent in January.

Rahmai said export of raw materials from Iran, including the iron ore, decreased by almost two thirds in 2019 to stand at nearly eight million tons.

Iran has maintained some harsh tariffs on the export of iron ore and other raw metals since September. That came after mills and smelters across the country faced a shortage of raw materials.

The boom in the Iranian mining and metals sector has come as the government seeks to offset the impacts of the American sanctions on the once-lucrative oil industry.

Authorities believe rising export of metals could compensate for a significant portion of the revenues lost due to the US bans on direct sale of crude.
 
News / Economy
Iran reports 14.8% growth in manufacturing despite bans
Sunday, 16 February 2020 2:58 PM [ Last Update: Sunday, 16 February 2020 3:05 PM ]

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Iran says manufacturing has grown by 14.8% in nearly a year despite growing US pressure.
Iran’s minister of industries says manufacturing activity has grown by nearly 15 percent despite growing American pressure on the country’s economy.

Reza Rahmani cited data published by the Central Bank of Iran showing that manufacturing growth had reached 2.3% in January this year from minus 12.5% in March 2018.

Rahmani made the comments in a meeting on Sunday with his deputies in the ministry of Industry, Mine and Trade (MIMT), according to a report by the semi-official ILNA agency.

“Last year the enemies touted the successive closure of the factories (in Iran), but fortunately, the plot failed due to efforts by all industrialists,” said the minister.

Iran has been under a series of unprecedented economic sanctions by the United States since November 2018, months after Washington withdrew from a major international agreement on Iran’s nuclear program.


Iran reports decreased car output in December compared to 2018
Ministry of industries says Iran’s car output declined by more than a quarter year-on-year in December.

The bans have seriously affected the government’s spending and investment in various sectors of the economy, including in the manufacturing where Iran relies on many small and large enterprises for much of its daily needs.

Rahmani said, however, that car output in Iran had also grown after a lengthy period of recession to reach 4,000 vehicles a day. That means a double increase to Iran’s average daily output compared to the recent months.

The MIMT issued a report last month showing that the total number of cars produced in Iran between late March and late December 2019 had topped 524,200, a decline of 25.6 percent compared to the similar nine-month period in 2018.

The government has adopted measures to protect industries from the impacts of the American sanctions, including by imposing tariffs on exports of raw material as well as providing credit facilities for small and medium-sized enterprises to help them survive the difficult economic situation.
 
News / Economy
Iran egg producers ditching cardboard to save nearly $20 mln a year
Monday, 17 February 2020 3:34 PM [ Last Update: Monday, 17 February 2020 3:41 PM ]

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File photo shows a cardboard factory in Iran.
Iranian egg producers say they will remove the use of cardboard boxes from packaging to save around $20 million a year.

Farzad Talakesh, a union representative of egg farmers in Iran, said on Monday that the industry is mulling plans to use special trucks for transportation of eggs to the shops that would render useless the cardboard boxes that have served packaging for many years.

Talakesh said the egg farming industry consumes some 83 million metric tons of cardboard each year, the highest among all industries in Iran.

He said the plan would save egg-laying farms across the country around $50,000 a day while it would result in less import into Iran of cardboard rolls.

Iranian egg producers normally use large cardboard boxes to package the nostalgic trays of 30 or 20 that are on offer for final delivery to the customers.


Iran ships 100 tons of table eggs each day amid oversupply
Iran is shipping 100 tons of table eggs each day after government cleared exports amid an oversupply.

It is not clear when the new transportation scheme would be rolled out. However, the plan is expected to mostly apply to deliveries inside Iran and cardboard would continue to be in use for exports each day of around 100 tons of table eggs to neighboring countries.

Ditching cardboard by the egg farmers in Iran comes amid an unprecedented surge in the price of paper in the country which has caused packaging costs to spiral.

The plan would also mean a huge boost to environmental efforts in Iran as it would significantly reduce the amount of water and energy used during the cardboard production process while it would mean less fuel consumption during transportation due to lighter packaging.
 
News / Economy
Iran reports 14.8% growth in manufacturing despite bans
Sunday, 16 February 2020 2:58 PM [ Last Update: Sunday, 16 February 2020 3:05 PM ]

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Iran says manufacturing has grown by 14.8% in nearly a year despite growing US pressure.
Iran’s minister of industries says manufacturing activity has grown by nearly 15 percent despite growing American pressure on the country’s economy.

Reza Rahmani cited data published by the Central Bank of Iran showing that manufacturing growth had reached 2.3% in January this year from minus 12.5% in March 2018.

Rahmani made the comments in a meeting on Sunday with his deputies in the ministry of Industry, Mine and Trade (MIMT), according to a report by the semi-official ILNA agency.

“Last year the enemies touted the successive closure of the factories (in Iran), but fortunately, the plot failed due to efforts by all industrialists,” said the minister.

Iran has been under a series of unprecedented economic sanctions by the United States since November 2018, months after Washington withdrew from a major international agreement on Iran’s nuclear program.


Iran reports decreased car output in December compared to 2018
Ministry of industries says Iran’s car output declined by more than a quarter year-on-year in December.

The bans have seriously affected the government’s spending and investment in various sectors of the economy, including in the manufacturing where Iran relies on many small and large enterprises for much of its daily needs.

Rahmani said, however, that car output in Iran had also grown after a lengthy period of recession to reach 4,000 vehicles a day. That means a double increase to Iran’s average daily output compared to the recent months.

The MIMT issued a report last month showing that the total number of cars produced in Iran between late March and late December 2019 had topped 524,200, a decline of 25.6 percent compared to the similar nine-month period in 2018.

The government has adopted measures to protect industries from the impacts of the American sanctions, including by imposing tariffs on exports of raw material as well as providing credit facilities for small and medium-sized enterprises to help them survive the difficult economic situation.
I don't know how but they need to facilitate faster money circulation. One of the biggest issues in Iran economy even before sanctions is long delay in payments.
 
I don't know how but they need to facilitate faster money circulation. One of the biggest issues in Iran economy even before sanctions is long delay in payments.
but many believe opposite of you said.
 
Iran opening large dairy plant to meet rising demand for butter, milk fats
Sat Oct 26, 2019 05:28PM [Updated: Sat Oct 26, 2019 10:09PM ]
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A large Iranian dairy factory is to open in a location to the west of the capital Tehran as authorities seek a full halt to massive imports of butter which costs tens of millions of dollar each year.

Touring the site of the factory on Saturday, Iran’s minister of industries Reza Rahmani described the dairy plant as “a mega project” which will make Iran self-sufficient in production of butter and other milk fats.

Iran imports more than 50,000 tons of butter each year to cover over 90 percent of its domestic demand. The dairy product is a staple of the Iranian breakfast and customs data from the previous calendar year shows that more than $100 million had been spent on butter imports until March.

Rahmani said more than 5,000 people will work in the new factory, located in Shahriar, a district near Tehran rich in livestock farming, adding that another 50,000 jobs will be created in the wider supply and distribution chain.

He said the government will back development plans in the privately-owned factory as it could enable Iran to start exports of various dairy products.

A first phase of the new dairy plant will be opened “soon”, according to a report by the IRIB News, which also said that the factory will be built on a area of 17 hectares and its three phases will cost more than half a billion dollar.

It added that some 1.3 million liters of milk will be processed in the facility each day, most of it supplied by livestock units in Shahriar and those in cities and counties to the north of Iran.

Video in link
https://www.presstv.com/Detail/2019/10/26/609643/Iran-dairy-factory-opening-butter-imports

Iran tries to cover its red meat production problems by producing more white meat.
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Iran reports significant surge in fisheries, aquaculture output
Mon Oct 21, 2019 04:21PM [Updated: Mon Oct 21, 2019 04:27PM ]
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Iran says fisheries, aquaculture production keep rising to respond to an increasing domestic demand.


Iran has managed to significantly increase its fisheries, aquaculture output over the past years as demand for healthy and nutritious sea foods keeps surging inside the country.

Head of Iran’s Fisheries Organization said on Monday that the annual fisheries and aquaculture production in the country would exceed a target of 1.250 million tons (1.37 million American tons) until March 2020, when the current Iranian calendar year ends.

Nabiollah Khunmirzaei said annual output stood at 1.1 million tons in the year ending in March 2019, saying the figure was above a target defined in a five-year national economic plan that started in 2016.

The official said a boom for fisheries industries in Iran was mainly a result of increased demand for seafood in the country.

He said average consumption of sea food items reached 12.1 kilograms per person last year, up more than 50 percent compared to several years before.


PressTV-Iran reports four-fold growth in shrimp farming
Iran says shrimp farming has grown in size nearly four times over the past years.

Speaking in an international fisheries and aquaculture exhibition on Tehran, Khunmirzaei said it had become a policy of the Iranian government to encourage consumption of seafood and white meat to reduce an annual import of 150,000 tons of red meat into the country.

He said Iran had made a good progress in trout farming, saying the country was currently the number one producer of rainbow trout in the world.

Khunmirzaei said production of caviar and shrimp had also experienced a boom over the past years,

He said Iran was currently third in the world in sturgeon farming and processing, adding that production of shrimp in aqua farms south and north of the country was on rise despite diseases that had affected output in the previous years.
https://www.presstv.com/Detail/2019/10/21/609226/Iran-fisheries-seafood-production-surge-official

This got me thinking about Pakistan’s butter market... not counting unbranded butter which has little to no tax & no advertising / marketing costs ...it seems Noon foods accounted for 78% of packaged butter in 2017.
That’s a virtual monopoly. There’s definitely space there for other more marketable brands.
It also makes me wonder about the other monopolies in Pakistan... no doubt there will be. Unfair markets with little to no regulation.
 
News / Energy / Editor's Choice
Iran fulfills dream as it unveils first homemade oil rig
Wednesday, 19 February 2020 11:24 AM [ Last Update: Wednesday, 19 February 2020 11:43 AM ]

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Minister of Petroleum Bijan Zangeneh talks to his aides as Iran's first homemade 72 Fath rig is seen in the background in Ahvaz, Feb. 19, 2020.
Iran has unveiled its first oil rig manufactured by domestic companies, fulfilling a dream which the country’s petroleum industry cherished for long.

“A rig is a mobile plant that can be moved from one place to another. The cost of building many factories is less than the cost of building a rig, and building an oil rig is very important,” Minister of Petroleum Bijan Zangeneh said.

The structure, named 72 Fath (Conquer), was unveiled in a ceremony in Ahvaz in southwest Iran where Zangeneh and other senior officials traveled to attend.

“Given the country's capacities, we need drilling equipment and accessories for many years to come, and the construction of a rig in Iran was one of the aspirations of the oil industry which realized today,” the minister said.

The achievement is another silver lining in the dark clouds of sanctions which the US government has imposed on Iran to cripple the country for not submitting to Washington’s steep demands.

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Minister of Petroleum Bijan Zangeneh observes the first Iranian-made oil drilling rig in Ahvaz, Feb. 19, 2020. (Photo by Shana)
Zangeneh has said Iran’s oil, gas and petroleum sectors are on the frontline of the fight against the United States’ “maximum pressure” which President Donald Trump has primarily applied on the oil industry because it accounts for a big chunk of Iran’s hard currency earnings.

Sanctions had made it difficult for Tehran to rent oil drilling rigs, forcing Ministry of Petroleum to approach intermediaries to find one to buy. In 2011, the ministry spent $87 million to buy an oil drilling rig, but it never reached the country's shores in what came to be known as "the case of the missing rig”.

However, the coercive measures have buoyed domestic entities which before the sanctions were a dark horse for lucrative contracts as major international companies always won them.

Iran’s oil industry has been looking inward since the sanctions came into effect in November 2018, going out of its way to put unprecedented trust in local companies for implementation of some major projects.

As an example, a multibillion-dollar deal to develop phase 11 of supergiant South Pars gas field has been awarded to Iran’s Petropars after French oil major Total and the China National Petroleum Corp (CNPC) withdrew from the project.

Iran’s biggest refinery for processing gas associated with oil production, built by local companies, is currently being geared up for launch within the next month or so, a senior energy official said on Wednesday.

“It is our duty to create work for domestic factories,” Zangeneh said on Tuesday, sounding out the government’s support for knowledge-based entities and start-ups.

The production of the first Iranian oil rig is a watershed in the country’s inward-looking drive, which has the special blessing of Leader of the Islamic Revolution Ayatollah Seyyed Ali Khamenei, who has called for turning the threat from the US sanctions into opportunities.

“Manufacturing rigs is not just for Iran. Once we are able to build the rig to international standards, we will be able to export it and its related services and we should take advantage of these opportunities,” Zangneh said.

“We are currently under sanctions, but the problem will pass with the prudence of the establishment and people’s resistance,” he said, adding Iran has to make the best of opportunities which the sanctions present it.

Largest gas refinery to come online

Managing Director of the Persian Gulf Petrochemical Industries Company Jafar Rabiei said on Wednesday the Persian Gulf Bid Boland Gas Refinery, being touted as Iran’s largest gas processing plant, will be up and running before the end of the current Iranian year on March 21.

The refinery has reached 97 percent of physical progress and is about to be injected with gas feedstock by the end of the current year, he said.

Zangeneh said this month the Persian Gulf Bid Boland Gas Refinery in Behbahan is expected to be “the source of a major change in reducing environmental pollution and developing the petrochemical industry”.


Iran to open largest flare gas refinery soon: Zangeneh
Iran will soon bring online its biggest refinery for processing gas associated with oil production, built with $3 billion of investment, Minister of Petroleum Bijan Zangeneh says.

The plant has a capacity to process 56 million cubic meters a day of associated gas, enough to produce 3.5 million tonnes of feedstock for use in petrochemical plants in Khuzestan province.

“This will usher in a major change in developing the petrochemical industry in Khuzestan province, especially the Gachsaran region,” the minister said.

Iran sits on the world's largest reserves of gas and the fourth largest oil deposits just behind Venezuela, Saudi Arabia and Canada, but the development of its energy sector has been bedeviled by sanctions.

Rabiei said on Wednesday the country will begin constructing its largest petrochemical facility under a megaproject named Hormoz Petrochemicals in 2022.

Other projects, such as Lordegan urea fertilizer has reached completion and will become operational before mid-March, while Ilam polypropylene has reached 96 percent of physical progress, with test production about to begin early next Iranian year.

Furthermore, Bu Ali Sina paraxylene, SADAF Assaluyeh Chemical Company, the chlorine unit of Bandar Imam Petrochemical Company, Apadana methanol, Hengam ammonia and NGL 3200 flare gas will become operational in the next Iranian year, Rabiei said.

Zangeneh said this month the construction of the Dehloran gas refinery known as NGL 3100 has reached 40 percent of physical progress and the project is expected to finish in the next two years.

Press TV’s website can also be accessed at the following alternate addresses:

www.presstv.ir

www.presstv.co.uk

www.presstv.tv
 
News / Energy / Editor's Choice
Iran fulfills dream as it unveils first homemade oil rig
Wednesday, 19 February 2020 11:24 AM [ Last Update: Wednesday, 19 February 2020 11:43 AM ]

4cc836fb-ccb6-437a-abb7-6bddb5a382bc.jpg

Minister of Petroleum Bijan Zangeneh talks to his aides as Iran's first homemade 72 Fath rig is seen in the background in Ahvaz, Feb. 19, 2020.
Iran has unveiled its first oil rig manufactured by domestic companies, fulfilling a dream which the country’s petroleum industry cherished for long.
This is a very BIG deal.[Atho iran has been building its own gas platforms for the last several years]
Is there anyone else in the region,ie gulfies,who either builds or just assembles oil rigs?,certainly offhand none come to mind.
Whatever happened to that 2016 deal with the russians to co build oil rigs?,another example of russian reliable unreliability no doubt?
 
News / Economy
Iran 81% self-sufficient in food despite floods and locust: Minister
Monday, 23 March 2020 12:54 PM [ Last Update: Monday, 23 March 2020 12:57 PM ]

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Iran’s agriculture minister says the country’s food self-sufficiency is at an all-time high of 81%.
Iran’s caretaker agriculture minister says self-sufficiency in food production is no longer a cherished dream for Iran as the country currently relies on home-grown products for more than 80 percent of its agrifood needs.

Abbas Keshavarz said on Monday that food self-sufficiency in Iran had surged by nearly 50 percent to reach an all-time high of 81 percent in the past Iranian calendar year which ended March 19.

“Many countries are dreaming to reach 85 percent, but we have approached this figure,” said Keshavarz in an interview with the IRIB News.

The caretaker minister said that cultivation for wheat, barley and rapeseed had grown across the country in recent years to allow the government to cut imports of those crops.

He said growing self-sufficiency in food production in Iran had come despite floods in March and April 2019 that devastated swathes of lands in north, west and southwest of Iran.

Keshavarz said a massive locust plague that took place in the country for a first time in 67 years could have seriously undermined the food security.

“In fact, we fought (locust) in more than 750,000 hectares of lands without any preparedness or prior notice,” he said, adding, “Not a single hectare of agricultural lands was damaged.”


Iran says rice self-sufficiency complete, no need to imports
An Iranian official says rice imports would be cut as the country is completely self-sufficient.

The official said the growing use of technology in the Iranian agricultural sector, including more mechanization, was also another reason for better production.

A jump in its agrifood exports from Iran over the past two years, which has mainly come as a result of the American sanctions on oil exports, has encouraged many farmers to expand the cultivation of strategic crops like wheat and rice.

Iran said earlier this year that it had reached full self-sufficiency in rice production.

Press TV’s website can also be accessed at the following alternate addresses:

www.presstv.ir

www.presstv.co.uk

www.presstv.tv
 
News / Iran Corona / Society
‘Iranian coronavirus diagnostic test kits ready to go to global market’
Wednesday, 25 March 2020 1:21 PM [ Last Update: Wednesday, 25 March 2020 1:21 PM ]

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This picture shows the domestically-developed coronavirus diagnostic test kit manufactured by the Iranian knowledge-based company Pishtaz Teb Zaman Diagnostics (Photo via the company’s website)
A manager of an Iranian knowledge-based company says their domestically-developed coronavirus diagnostic test kits are ready to be put to the market, adding that the firm is fairly capable of providing 80,000 kits on a weekly basis to the laboratories recommended by the country’s ministry of health.

Vahid Younesi, the business development manager at Pishtaz Teb Zaman Diagnostics, said the research and development team at his company began its work on the production of indigenous laboratory test kits for the new coronavirus, after the first cases were confirmed in Iran last month and upon a call for cooperation by the country’s Vice-Presidency for Science and Technology, Tasnim news agency reported on Wednesday.

“Researchers and specialists at the firm are working round-the-clock and strenuously on the matter and have utilized the instructions plus world experience, especially by the two pioneer counties of the US and China in the manufacture of coronavirus diagnostic test kits,” he pointed out.


‘80 hours for 80mn campaign’ pressing US to ditch Iran sanctions amid outbreak
A popular campaign seeks to pressure the US into temporarily lifting its sanctions against Iran that are impeding the country’s struggle against the new coronavirus’ outbreak.

Younesi added that Pishtaz Teb Zaman Diagnostics can supply recommended labs with 80,000 kits every week, and has expressed its readiness to deliver 400,000 kits within the next Persian calendar month (April 20 – My 20).

“COVID-19 will be correctly diagnosed in suspected patients with the product. These kits will seek out [the virus’] viral genomes, and the result will be out once the diagnosis process is completed,” he noted.

Younesi highlighted that his knowledge-based company has already mass-produced the coronavirus diagnostic test kits, and is awaiting proper permits for distribution among laboratories approved by the Iranian health ministry.

The Iranian coronavirus test kit “is exactly on par with the foreign-made ones as regards precision, functionality and time of diagnosis … It will take two hours for test results to come out,” he said.


US told it’s time to lift Iran sanctions amid COVID-19 pandemic
Top diplomats and officials from all around the world are increasingly urging the United States to remove its unilateral sanctions against Iran amid the country’s battle against the novel coronavirus.

Younesi concluded that his company will start exporting the Iranian coronavirus test kits once domestic needs are met, emphasizing that some 20 countries have placed ordered to purchase the kits.

Iran has confirmed 27,000 cases of coronavirus since the infection was spotted in the country on February 19.

More than 9,000 people have recovered and 2,077 have died of the virus, according to the latest figures provided by the health ministry.

Officials believe cases could surge in the coming weeks if more tests are carried out especially in remote areas where access to health care is low.

However, more testing could also boost efforts to prevent more deaths, especially among the elderly and those suffering from underlying conditions.


Sanctions on Iran, others facing coronavirus must be urgently re-evaluated: UN
The United Nations calls for urgent re-evaluation of any sanctions on Iran and countries facing the new coronavirus pandemic.

Several other biotechnology firms in Iran have developed testing kits for coronavirus amid restrictions on the imports of the diagnostic tools which has come as a result of the American sanctions.

The government has said it would exhaust all its resources to ensure there would be sufficient protective gear and vital equipment to respond to the coronavirus outbreak in the country.

The United States reinstated its sanctions against Iran in 2018 after leaving a United Nations-endorsed nuclear agreement with the Islamic Republic and five other major powers -- the UK, France, Russia and China plus Germany.

Washington claims that it has exempted foodstuffs and medicine from the bans, something that Tehran entirely disputes.

Press TV’s website can also be accessed at the following alternate addresses:

www.presstv.ir

www.presstv.co.uk

www.presstv.tv
 

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