I really think these reports from Paul McKellips, US Department of State, Public Affairs GO Team on assignment in Iraq, are fascinating. It’s helping provide a behind the scenes look at agriculture in a country where we’re getting almost nothing but political spin news from the mainstream press. This story is about the revival of the date palm farm business in Iraq.
The date palm tree has long been the cherished symbol of Iraq. Dates are the second largest export after oil. During the 1950s, Iraq’s palm orchards produced more than 600 varieties of dates and, by some estimates, accounted for nearly 80% of the world’s supply. During the country’s golden era there were more than 30 million fruit producing trees. But wars, neglect, improper drainage, and the scurvy of the dreaded Dobas bug left the industry in shambles. Particularly hard hit was southern Iraq where 16 million date palm trees were cut down, burned and transformed into battlefields during the Iran-Iraq was in the 1980s.
You can listen to his report about what’s being done to revive these farms here: Iraq Date Palm Farms (4 min MP3)