Iran’s exports to Islamic countries rises 17%
TEHRAN – The head of Iran National Standards Organization (INSO) has said that the country’s exports to Islamic nations has increased by 17 percent in the current Iranian calendar year (started on March 20), IRNA reported.
Mehdi Eslam-Panah made the remarks on Sunday evening at the closing ceremony of the 18th edition of Iran's National Quality Award, which was held in Tehran with the presence of MPs, heads of the chambers of commerce, manufacturers, entrepreneurs, inspection companies, and economic operators.
“This export growth is one of the indicators of our achievements in the standards field,” he said.
As previously announced by the Islamic Republic of Iran Customs Administration (IRICA), the value of trade exchanges between Iran and the other 56 members of the Organization of Islamic Conference (OIC) reached $32.2 billion in the first half of the current Iranian calendar year (March 20-September 21), registering a 14 percent increase compared to the same period a year earlier.
According to the IRICA, the volume of the trade exchanges between Iran and OIC member states in the mentioned six months reached 48.8 million tons, also four percent more compared to the previous year's same time span.
Iran exported 38.4 million tons of non-oil goods worth $15.6 billion to OIC member countries and imported 10.4 million tons of commodities valued at $16.6 billion from them in the first six months of the current Iranian year.
IRICA report added that the country’s exports to OIC members registered 10 percent and one percent increase in value and weight respectively in the mentioned period, while the import of products from the mentioned countries also increased by 18 percent and 16 percent in terms of value and weight.
Back in May 2023, the former head of the Iran Chamber of Commerce, Industries, Mines, and Agriculture (ICCIMA) stressed the need for establishing a joint Islamic market among OIC members over the next 10 years.
Addressing a gathering of the heads of OIC member chambers of commerce on the sidelines of the "Russia - Islamic World: Kazan Forum 2023" in Russia, Gholam-Hossein Shafeie said: “An important issue that has been discussed a lot in the past and the organization should pay attention to it in the current situation is the creation of a common Islamic market in the next 10 years, which can be achieved by concluding a free trade agreement among Islamic countries and removing tariff and non-tariff barriers.”
“Experts have worked on the Islamic market plan, and using the experiences and studies of these experts can definitely be a way forward,” he added.
The Organization of Islamic Cooperation, which was formed in 1972, today has reached a position where, according to statistics, the future of the world's energy would be in the hands of the Organization of Islamic Cooperation, Shafeie said in his speech.
EF/MA