1. The Afghan population is suffering from economic crisis & drought. Rural people are especially vulnerable: they lack functioning markets for legal cash crops, public sector employment has collapsed, & the private sector-once buoyed by international spending- is imploding.
2. Many are trying to escape, leaving the country in large numbers via Zaranj in the SW. The exodus began as early as May 2021 when Biden announced the US withdrawal, & increased exponentially with the Taliban takeover. In October, as many as 12K people left the country each day.
3. In the past, smugglers talked of the heyday of 2014-15 when W. Europe was “open”. Now they say business has never been so as good. The numbers departing have fallen with the onset of winter, but there are still more than twice as many people leaving as 12 months ago.
4. Nobody knows if this pace of departures continues but there’s no reason to think migration will slow if the Afghan economic crisis worsens. Significant numbers are entering Iran, & many migrants want to continue toward Europe in spring 2022 when the mountains become passable
5. Others remain in Afghanistan. But how will they survive? In the past, rural households had at least one member with a trade or job in the city. Now families have lost this income & have more mouths to feed, increased food prices, & some (not all) are experiencing drought.
6. Drug crop cultivation seems an obvious choice. High-value, low-weight crops, with almost guaranteed markets & traders who purchase at the farm gate, poppy is a low-risk crop in a high-risk environment, perfectly suited to the current economic & political climate in Afghanistan
7. As we get further into the planting season there are already signs of increasing poppy cultivation. Some portray the rise of opium production as a function of the Taliban’s rise to power, interpreting this as a failure to control the industry.
8. The reality is different: in rural Afghanistan power is negotiated, markets are thin, & the rural population is an important political constituency. Conflict, closed borders & drought have impacted on the few profitable crops that provided opportunities for farmers in the past
9. Reports of the felling of pomegranate trees-a longterm productive asset-in the Arghandab & their replacement with poppy shows growing levels of stress even in better-off areas, & signals the potential for much higher levels of poppy cultivation in 2022. nytimes.com/2021/11/21/wor…
10. Of course the relationship between drought & poppy is complicated, particularly when wheat prices have risen dramatically & border closures are fresh in farmers’ minds. Opium is reliable during drought: it needs more water than wheat if it is to get a good yield, but …
11. ……will yield at least something in dry conditions whereas wheat might fail. Still, you can’t eat opium. Farmers usually set aside some land for wheat, should conditions allow.
12. It will not be possible to truly assess this season’s poppy crop until mid-March 2022 at the earliest. Only then are we able to properly differentiate between wheat & poppy using high-resolution satellite imagery. Before then, everything is just speculation.
13. Opium will not be the only thing to watch. Over the last few years things have changed & there are new options for drug production available for rural households in Afghanistan in the form of the ephedra-ephedrine-methamphetamine economy emcdda.europa.eu/system/files/p…
14. This provides income to rural households harvesting the wild ephedra crop in the high mountains of Afghanistan (where poppy doesn’t grow) but also to those households processing the dried crop into ephedrine in what is a growing cottage industry in the SW.
15. Despite the claims that ephedra is bulky or even, as some suggest, running out in Afghanistan, there is no evidence of a shortage on the ground. Abdul Wadood the market hub for the meth industry in the SW is booming.
16. Imagery @AlcisGeo shows new shops, an extended storage area for dried & milled ephedra, & more inventory than ever before. There is also an expansion of the catchment area.
17. In Bakwa, ephedra is now sourced from the mountains of Helmand, Ghor, Badghis, Farah & Ghazni, with the higher yielding coming from Ghor & Badghis. There is so much available, prices have fallen to only $0.63 kg in November 2021 compared to $0.84/kg the same time last year.
18. This drop In the price of ephedra is particularly advantageous as other input costs for ephedrine production have risen dramatically, with most imports required doubling in price including salt, diesel, caustic soda & sulphuric acid.
19. At the same time the price of ephedrine has fallen from $60/kg to $51/kg, thereby squeezing profits to less than $10/kg, compared to $35/kg a year ago. The price of meth has taken an even more precipitous fall, from $305/kg in April 2020 to $200/kg at the end of November 2021
20. The returns are so low & import costs so high that the use of OTC - cough mixtures & tablets - is now unheard of in meth production. With such low margins ephedrine & meth producers need to increase volumes just to maintain their income.
21. Moreover, production will
need to rise further to offset the rising cost of living & the loss of non farm income. Perhaps this is the reason for such large amounts of ephedra & increased activity at Abdul Wadood.
22. Certainly imagery analysis @AlcisGeo supports reports from the ground and shows a growing capacity for ephedrine production, with a 34% increase in the number of ephedrine labs identified over the last year, & those labs that were already there appear to be producing more.
23. All this points to a crisis in Afghanistan with much wider impact: increasing levels of migration, meth & probably opium production, all as a response to the rapidly deteriorating economic situation.
24. Some believe the various border walls & fences constructed en route will contain these supply chains. However, there are sufficient gaps in these structures, corruption, & alternative routes (including catapults) that large numbers of people and drugs still get through.
25. As such, while Afghanistan’s assets are frozen in the U.S, its liabilities will be borne directly by Afghans, the region, & also by European nations. More needs to be done to alleviate the economic crisis not just for the Afghan population but for those further afield.

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More from @mansfieldintinc

18 Nov
1. I dont think I have seen a report this confused for some time. Well possibly not since UNODC’s “is poverty driving the opium boom in Afghanistan” in 2008 (a report that argues the polar opposite of what @UNODC is claiming here).
2. It is not just the word soup (p7) “In view of the volatile security situation, protracted economic crisis & health emergency, the international community must urgently provide basic needs & services to the people of Afghanistan” (breath)…
3. …..” to promote sustainable reductions in illicit drug cultivation, production & demand” (& I suspect here is the rub) “as part of overall UN assistance”.
Read 23 tweets
21 Oct
1. The latest report exposes a number of myths about Afghanistan, drugs, taxes & the Taliban based on indepth fieldwork over the last 25 years and high resolution imagery analysis @AlcisGeo areu.org.af/wp-content/upl…
2. It suggests we all need to be more discerning consumers of data: media, scholars, officials. It’s a prerequisite that we look at method, even if it’s in an esteemed journal, from a celebrated journalist or scholar, or an official UN report. For example (in no particular order)
3. Myth 1. The Taliban banned opium cultivation in 2000/01 to increase the value of the stockpiles they had accumulated. The reality is the opium bazaars were already empty in May 2001 and no stockpiles were ever found in Afghanistan despite considerable efforts to locate them.
Read 25 tweets
11 Oct
1. The numbers of migrants departing Zaranj in Nimroz for Pakistan en route to Iran has increased exponentially. Reports indicate most are ex employees of the former Republic, some leaving along with their families, highlighting the desperate situation for many in Afghanistan.
2. We have been documenting these departures for some time. As early as June 2021 -some 2 months before the govt collapsed- we pointed to the dramatic rise in the number of migrants & the growing proportion of ANA/ANP amongst them.
3. Since capturing Zaranj the the people smuggling business has been “regulated” by Taliban. Akin to other businesses, regulation has been minimal & often taken the form of restating pre-existing practices. Further evidence of the Taliban’s “small govt” approach to the economy.
Read 15 tweets
31 Aug
1. I was trying to avoid any more threads for a while but this story needs much more context and a look beyond the headlines. It represents only a snapshot in time and perhaps a local event: it certainly not the whole picture.
wsj.com/articles/talib…
2. 12 days ago the price of fresh opium increased to around $135 per kilogram in the south, a function of market uncertainty due to the Taliban announcement of the intention to ban opium poppy cultivation, but also border closures following their capture of Kabul.
3. However, this was only temporary and markets have now corrected: prices have fallen to between $55 & $80 per kilogram in Helmand depending on quality. On the Iranian border prices are slightly higher, at up to $100/kg for good quality opium.
Read 8 tweets
28 Aug
1. During this really difficult time for Afghanistan & its population, while the west decides how it will engage, it would be helpful if people would be more discerning about what they write, it could draw on misinformation & result in illconceived & counterproductive policies
2. Just cos something has been written don’t make it true. And if it has been written check out what the actual sources say and whether they are credible - just cos it’s a “reputable” org it may have just lifted the figures from somewhere else without checking the veracity.
3. This for example, like so many articles on drugs is littered with facts that ain’t so. It makes claims that if you think about them make no sense at all. For one, the idea that the Taliban collects 10% of the value of the drugs trade (others like USFOR-A claimed 20%).
Read 25 tweets
6 Aug
1. The fall of Ziranj is significant, perhaps less because it is a provincial centre & more it marks the final official border crossing with Iran to fall to Taliban & a major source of revenue to the govt & it’s allies.
washingtonpost.com/world/2021/08/…
2. Official revenue from Ziranj $43.2 million p.a. in duties plus another $50 million in direct taxes. We estimate $176 million p.a. when undeclared goods included. That is as much as $83 mill p.a to share amongst “friends” - part of the glue that held the Republic together?
3. Official trade stats indicate Taliban have control over border crossings with trade worth $3.4 billion p.a, incl. $2 billion p.a. with Iran. Undeclared trade worth significantly more with 1.5 million MT of fuel entering Afghanistan from Iran undeclared. dec.usaid.gov/dec/GetDoc.axd…
Read 8 tweets

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