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Tehran shopkeepers extend strikes into second day

Dec 29, 2025, 09:47 GMT+0
A screen grab from a video showing protests on Jomhouri Street in Central Tehran, Iran, December 28, 2025.
A screen grab from a video showing protests on Jomhouri Street in Central Tehran, Iran, December 28, 2025.

Shopkeepers in Tehran extended strikes into a second day on Monday, with closures reported across several key markets amid mounting economic pressure and a sharp fall in the national currency, according to information received by Iran International.

Traders in the historic Chaharsouq bazaar joined the strike, while Tehran’s gold market remained shut and shopkeepers gathered for a protest on Lalehzar Street.

Merchants at other markets, including Jafari bazaar and parts of the Shoush wholesale district, were also reported to have stopped work.

The latest closures follow protests on Sunday by mobile phone traders outside the Iran Mobile Center and the Alaeddin Mobile Shopping Center on Hafez Street in central Tehran. V

ideos sent to Iran International showed crowds chanting antigovernment slogans, with passersby later joining demonstrations near Jomhouri Street.

Reports also circulated on social media of protests at Tehran’s Charsou mall, while iron market traders were said to have closed their shops to protest the currency’s decline.

The unrest comes as Iran’s rial slid to new record lows, weakening to around 1,445,000 per dollar on Sunday, compared with about 1,370,000 the day before and roughly 1,140,000 a month earlier, according to open market rates.

Iran has been grappling with soaring prices and currency volatility. Official data show food prices have risen by more than 66% over the past year, while year-on-year inflation reached 52.6% in December.

There were no immediate reports of security force intervention on Monday.

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Iran audit body disputes president’s gasoline import cost estimate

Dec 29, 2025, 07:27 GMT+0

Iran’s audit watchdog pushed back on President Masoud Pezeshkian’s comments about fuel costs, warning officials against providing inaccurate data and saying gasoline imports this year were far lower than figures cited publicly.

The Supreme Audit Court said in a statement that documented gasoline import costs had reached $1.8 billion by late December, adding that even under a high-end scenario, total imports for the full year would amount to around $2.7 billion, well below the president’s estimate.

Pezeshkian had told parliament earlier this week that the government spent about $6 billion importing gasoline this year, while budgeting roughly $8 billion in subsidized foreign exchange next year for essential imports, even as many goods were effectively priced at market exchange rates.

The president cited fuel and energy subsidies as a central distortion in Iran’s economy, arguing that higher consumption channels larger amounts of state support to wealthier households. He described the current system as inequitable and unsustainable, particularly as domestic fuel demand continues to rise.

The audit body warned against the use of inaccurate or unverified financial data in policymaking, saying that decisions on energy shortages and broader economic reforms should be based on “precise, transparent and verifiable information.”

The dispute comes as Iran grapples with chronic fuel shortages, rising imports and a widening gap between domestic production capacity and consumption. Officials have said inefficient vehicles, smuggling and low prices have pushed gasoline demand well beyond refinery output, forcing imports despite Iran’s status as a major oil producer.

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  • Tehran shopkeepers protest currency plunge as rial hits all-time low

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While the audit court challenged the scale of gasoline imports, it did not dispute broader concerns over subsidies, which economists say absorb tens of billions of dollars annually and weigh heavily on public finances.

A reformist daily, Etemad, said in an editorial on Monday that Iran’s budget debate reflects a deeper problem: a persistent gap between official plans and economic realities.

“The distance between what is written on paper and what happens in practice remains deep and worrying,” the paper wrote, adding that promises to reform spending and target resources have repeatedly translated into pressure on “transparent and productive” sectors rather than on inefficient or tax-exempt entities.

The editorial argued that quasi-state and semi-private companies continue to operate in a “safe zone,” contributing little in taxes despite controlling a significant share of economic resources. “A large portion of national resources circulates within this gray structure without an effective return to the public budget,” it said.

The paper also warned that a 25% rise in bond issuance signaled growing reliance on borrowing, shifting fiscal pressure into the future without generating sustainable growth.

The gasoline cost dispute adds to pressure on Pezeshkian’s government as lawmakers review the budget for the Iranian year beginning in March, against a backdrop of high inflation, currency weakness and public frustration over living costs.

The dispute unfolded as shopkeeper protests linked to the rial’s plunge continued in Tehran for a second day on Monday.

Tehran shopkeepers protest currency plunge as rial hits all-time low

Dec 28, 2025, 14:37 GMT+0

Protests broke out among shopkeepers in central Tehran on Sunday after a sharp slide in the rial, with videos sent to Iran International showing crowds chanting antigovernment slogans.

Mobile phone traders gathered outside the Iran Mobile Center and the Alaeddin Mobile Shopping Center on Hafez Street in central Tehran, according to eyewitness accounts and videos sent Iran International.

An eyewitness said the chants began with shopkeepers, with passersby later joining in on Jomhouri Street near the Hafez underpass on Sunday.

Reports also circulated on social media of protests at Tehran’s Charsou mall.

Separately, iron market traders in Tehran stopped work on Sunday morning, closing their shops to protest the rial’s decline, according to reports on social media.

The protests come as Iran’s rial weakened to new historic lows on Sunday, falling to about 1,445,000 per dollar, 1,700,000 per euro and 1,950,000 per pound, according to Tehran's open market rates.

A day earlier, the rial was trading at about 1,370,000 to the dollar. About a month earlier, it was valued at around 1,140,000 per dollar on the open market.

In recent months, runaway inflation and the rial's declining value have added to concerns over worsening economic conditions in Iran.

Over the past year, prices of food items in Iran have risen by an average of more than 66 percent, according to official data.

Iran’s Statistics Center said on Saturday that year-on-year, or point-to-point, inflation rose to 52.6 percent.

Restoring Iran’s Zagros soils needs half of annual oil income, official warns

Dec 28, 2025, 11:53 GMT+0

Iran is losing soil faster than any other country, and restoring fertility in its vast Zagros mountain range would require diverting roughly half of annual oil revenues each year, a senior forestry expert said.

Hadi Kiadaliri, vice president of Iran’s Forestry Association, said studies show the country now holds the global record for soil erosion, a problem he attributed to unsustainable land use, water-intensive agriculture and weak integration of environmental limits into economic planning.

“Based on the results of one study, restoring soil fertility in the Zagros would require allocating 50% of annual oil income,” Kiadaliri told ISNA news agency, calling the cost a measure of how deeply natural capital has been depleted.

The Zagros range stretches across western Iran and underpins large parts of the country’s water cycle, biodiversity and rural livelihoods. Environmental experts have long warned that erosion, deforestation and overgrazing in the region threaten food security and increase flood and drought risks.

Kiadaliri said Iran’s development path had relied heavily on expanding agriculture despite the fact that about 93% of the country is classified as arid or semi-arid.

Between 2004 and 2020, he said, farmland expanded by around 3.6 million hectares, largely at the expense of forests and rangelands – an average loss of about 500 hectares of natural land per day.

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Water resources have also been overexploited to sustain agricultural output, he said, arguing that food security had been narrowly defined as supply rather than resilience. “Environmental resilience is part of food security,” Kiadaliri said, adding that ignoring it has undermined long-term productivity.

He said international experience shows that environmental protection and economic development are not mutually exclusive, pointing out that no highly developed country has achieved sustained growth while degrading its natural environment.

Iranian officials have increasingly acknowledged environmental stress as climate change, drought and land degradation intensify.

The Department of Environment has recently pushed to formally value ecosystem services – such as water regulation, soil protection and carbon storage – a step Kiadaliri said could make environmentally damaging projects economically unviable once their true costs are accounted for.

“If ecosystem services are properly valued, many projects will no longer make financial sense,” he said, arguing that such accounting could curb further environmental damage.

Environmental groups say without structural changes in land management, water use and development planning, Iran’s soil erosion will continue to accelerate, raising long-term economic and social costs far beyond the immediate price of restoration.

Iran says it has 4 million tons of wheat in strategic reserves

Dec 28, 2025, 10:52 GMT+0

Iran has set aside about 4 million tons of wheat as a strategic reserve, equivalent to roughly three to four months of domestic consumption, the head of the state-run Government Trading Corporation said.

Saeed Rad, chief executive of the Government Trading Corporation of Iran, a subsidiary of the Agriculture Ministry responsible for state purchasing, imports and strategic stockpiles of staple goods, said the reserves had been secured through a combination of domestic production and imports.

He said Iran bought 7.7 million tons of wheat from local farmers this year under a guaranteed purchase scheme, with the remainder of national demand met through imports.

The comments come as Iran’s parliament approved a five-year pilot plan aimed at supporting agricultural production and increasing the resilience of food supply in wartime and emergency conditions, passing the measure with 207 votes in favor on Sunday.

The plan was reviewed under Article 85 of Iran’s constitution and comprises 27 articles, according to parliamentary statements.

Gorgan Gulf remains at risk as Caspian levels fall

Dec 28, 2025, 09:47 GMT+0

Iranian officials warned that the Gulf of Gorgan, the largest bay of the Caspian Sea, remains at risk of a “silent crisis,” saying dredging alone will not be enough to secure its long-term survival as water levels continue to fall.

Authorities say emergency dredging of the Ashouradeh channel in recent years helped restore limited water flow, reduce salinity and prevent the bay and the nearby Miankaleh wetland from drying out completely.

But experts caution the measures have only bought time, leaving the fragile ecosystem vulnerable to continued retreat of the Caspian Sea, disrupted natural inflows and renewed sedimentation.

Saeed Rasouli, head of Iran’s Ports and Maritime Organization, said studies carried out by the agency showed that pumping water from the Caspian Sea into the bay was a necessary parallel step to dredging, but the plan has not yet been fully implemented.

He said updated engineering assessments were under way to determine how much of the current degradation is due to reduced depth, falling sea levels or new sediment layers.

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Officials say feasibility studies have confirmed that installing pumping stations could help sustain the bay for at least the next 20 years, but the project remains stalled pending further technical work and implementation by the energy ministry.

Rasouli added that Iran had urged greater regional cooperation at a recent Caspian Sea meeting, warning that the shrinking bay reflects a broader environmental challenge shared by all five littoral states.