Mongolia to answer surge in Iran’s meat demand
Export to Iran would be carried out by Darkhan Meat Foods as well as its rivals Max Impex and Max Market.
Mongolia is reportedly preparing to satisfy a surging demand in Iran’s ‘halal’ meat market with officials saying exports of several thousand tonnes of mutton per year will be the starting target. Reuters in a report said Mongolia’s plans to export its organic meat to Iran were part of the country’s policies to answer calls by the International Monetary Fund to diversify away from mainstream sources of revenue such as mining and turn its huge pastoral economy into a major earner. Export to Iran, the report added, would be carried out by Darkhan Meat Foods as well as its rivals Max Impex and Max Market. Darkhan Meat Foods alone would double its exports of the meat in 2018 from 1,320 tons last year. The company’s previous exports only included beef and horse meat to other countries. The slaughtering of the livestock bound for Iran would be carried out under the supervision of experts from the Iranian Veterinary Organization who would try to make sure the meat would be produced according to the Sharia law of Islam. The mutton is then frozen and transported by truck through Russia and Kazakhstan, reaching Iran in about two weeks. Mongolia has an estimated 30 million sheep - more than New Zealand - but has until recently only managed to export a thin slice of its overall meat output. It hopes that will change as it taps overseas appetite for halal mutton from places such as Iran, which are forced to import due to limited local production. Largely because of that kind of new demand, Mongolia's sheep and goat meat shipments hit 2,601 tons in 2017, 11 times more than 2016. And while that was worth only around $8 million, industry officials say those volumes are likely just the starts, with exports in the first half of 2018 quadrupling year-on-year to 775.6 tons.
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