Iran says price of imported gasoline far outstrips subsidized rate
Iran’s government said on Tuesday that the real cost of importing gasoline has climbed to 700,000 rials per liter (about $0.62), far above the heavily subsidized pump prices that remain unchanged.
Wildfires that have been burning for over two weeks in northern Iran’s steep, densely wooded Hyrcanian forests flared again on Monday, prompting the deployment of helicopters and fresh ground crews, as officials warned that heat, wind and dry vegetation were fuelling the blaze.
Flames flared again in the hard-to-reach Elit area near the town of Marzanabad in Chalous after an earlier blaze had been brought under control, local media reported. Officials said the new outbreak forced the deployment of helicopters and fresh ground crews to try to prevent the fire from spreading across the slopes.
“A large number of protection units, local people, Basij volunteers and mountaineers are present at the scene to contain and extinguish the fire,” said Mehrdad Khazaei-Poul, head of the Natural Resources and Watershed Management Department in Mazandaran, according to ISNA news agency. “The area is very difficult to access and the steep, rocky terrain and high elevation have made the work harder.”
Khazaei-Poul said at least one helicopter had been sent from Tehran to support firefighting efforts, and provincial officials later reported that two aircraft had been dispatched with support from the defense ministry, with a third on standby.
“Without the help of firefighting helicopters, it is not possible for ground forces alone to fully control this fire,” he said.
Yahya Yousef-pour, the governor of Chalous, said fresh teams were being rotated into the area to relieve exhausted crews.
“Several operational groups, emergency services and local residents have been deployed to the area,” he told the official IRNA news agency. “Our goal is to minimize damage to natural resources and to control the fire as quickly as possible.”
The fires have broken out in parts of the Hyrcanian or Caspian forests, a band of ancient broadleaf woodland that stretches like a green belt along the southern shores of the Caspian Sea and the northern slopes of the Alborz mountains.
The forests, recognized as a UNESCO World Heritage site, host dozens of tree and shrub species and cover large areas of Mazandaran, which has more than one million hectares of forest – about 53% of Iran’s northern woodlands.
Officials said warm weather, low humidity and accumulations of dry leaves and dead wood had allowed small fires to spread quickly in recent days.
“Rising temperatures and the drying of vegetation have increased the likelihood of new fires and the spread of existing ones in forests and rangelands,” Khazaei-Poul said. “This year, higher temperatures and lower humidity have dried the soil and vegetation, so the risk of fire is greater.”
Environmental officials said the fires have also raised concerns for wildlife in the Hyrcanian ecosystem.
“There are many valuable plant and animal species in this region,” said Hadi Kia-Daliri, a senior Environment Department official. “Our first priority is to put out the fire, and the survival of many animal species now depends on how quickly we can control it.”
Authorities said protection units remained on high alert along the forest front in western Mazandaran, where several smaller surface fires have been reported in recent days.
Iran’s dairy industry is facing sharp cost pressures after the price of raw milk jumped roughly 60% in five months, a surge that industry officials say matches half a century of previous increases and is driving daily price changes across supermarket shelves.
Ali Ehsan Zafari, head of the national dairy products union, told ILNA news agency that the cost of raw milk had risen from about 230,000 rials per kilo (around 20 US cents) five months ago to roughly 390,000 rials (about 35 cents).
“This rate of increase is equal to what happened over 50 years.” He said factories were raising retail prices almost every day because “raw milk is the main input and its price rises every day.”
Dairy producers warn that demand has already fallen as households struggle to absorb higher food costs, raising fears of factory closures.
“With prices rising, demand has dropped, and this will ultimately lead to plants shutting down one after another,” Zafari said.
Producers and local media say drought-driven pressure on livestock farmers and sharply higher feed costs are among the main factors behind the jump.
Supermarkets have reported 50-60% increases across popular dairy items in recent weeks.
Iran’s broader inflation remains high, squeezing household purchasing power. Economists say official figures – including an annual inflation rate reported around 38% – understate real price pressures.
Heavy rainfall caused floods in parts of western Iran on Monday, swamping streets and homes in areas that have endured months of severe drought and the country’s worst water shortages in decades, local media reported.
Footage published from Abdanan, in Ilam province, showed torrents of water sweeping through residential districts and damaging roads and neighborhoods.
Local officials said downpours in Abdanan and Dehloran led to overflowing waterways, the swelling of several rivers and the emergency evacuation of a number of families.
Relief teams from the Iranian Red Crescent were deployed to pump water out of flooded homes and clear blocked streets, authorities said.
Damage assessments were continuing on Monday, with officials saying their immediate priority was helping families whose houses had been inundated.
The national meteorological organization issued flood warnings for six western provinces and forecast rainfall in 18 of the country’s 31 provinces.
It said precipitation across Iran this year is roughly 85% below average, a shortfall that has emptied reservoirs and left taps running dry in several regions, including parts of Tehran.
Experts and officials have attributed the worsening crisis to prolonged drought, climate change, poor water management, illegal well drilling and inefficient agricultural practices.
Extended dry spells reduce the soil’s ability to absorb water, increasing the likelihood of flash floods when rain does occur.
Over the weekend, Iran conducted its first cloud-seeding operation of the year above the watershed of Lake Urmia in the northwest.
Cloud seeding involves dispersing chemicals into clouds to stimulate rainfall, though meteorologists caution that it is expensive and provides only limited benefit.
“In addition to cloud seeding’s heavy cost, the amount of rainfall it produces is nowhere near what is needed to solve our water crisis,” Sahar Tajbakhsh, head of Iran’s Meteorological Organization, told state television on Sunday.
An Iranian newspaper has warned that inconsistent official messaging over the prospects of renewed talks with the United States is fueling public confusion and undermining trust, arguing that greater transparency would be more effective in managing expectations.
In an editorial published on Monday, the reform-leaning HamMihan newspaper said recent statements by senior Iranian officials had sent mixed signals about diplomacy, creating the impression of “uncertainty and waiting” both inside the government and across society.
The paper said officials repeatedly said that Iran’s strategic positions “are unchangeable,” while also signaling that “they do not want the possibility of positive news to be closed off.” According to HamMihan, this dual approach risks weakening the impact of important developments.
“This pattern of communication has the opposite result and leads to desensitization toward news,” the editorial said. “It makes people more distrustful and increases a sense of hopelessness. Being transparent and straightforward with public opinion has better effects.”
The newspaper highlighted a series of comments made by Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi and other Iranian diplomats over the past week. HamMihan said that Araghchi initially said “there is currently no possibility” for negotiations because Iran sees “no positive or constructive approach from the United States.”
However, days later he was quoted as saying that “a request for negotiations has been revived because the military approach failed to achieve what was sought regarding Iran’s nuclear program.”
According to the editorial, such shifts create questions that officials have not answered. “If Iran has not changed its position, what changes has the Foreign Ministry seen in the other side that would make talks possible?” it asked, adding that it remained unclear whether the reference was to the United States or European governments.
HamMihan argued that public expectations had risen after earlier signs of potential diplomacy but were later dashed by a 12-day conflict that halted those efforts.
With little movement on domestic reforms and no clear pathway on foreign policy, the editorial said the Iranian public and the government are “waiting for news that goes beyond daily headlines.”
The paper wrote: “We would like these talks to begin – serious and result-oriented – but we are concerned that this manner of news reporting lacks sufficient grounding and will make society more disappointed.”
Iran has launched this year’s cloud-seeding operations over the Lake Urmia basin as the country faces one of its worst droughts in decades, with authorities simultaneously urging nationwide rain-seeking prayers as reservoirs run dry and water shortages deepen across major cities.
The Energy Ministry’s atmospheric water technologies organization said the first flight of the 2024–25 water year was conducted on Saturday over northwestern Iran, where Lake Urmia – once the Middle East’s largest saltwater lake – has largely dried into a salt plain after years of drought, over-extraction and extreme heat.
Mohammad-Mehdi Javadianzadeh, who heads the state body, said a specialized aircraft equipped for cloud seeding was deployed as a suitable weather system passed over the region.
He said teams plan to conduct operations “on all incoming systems that are technically viable” and are assessing conditions over Tehran and other provinces to determine whether additional flights can be launched in the coming days.
He said the aim is to maintain continuous operational capacity in the northwest, with authorities planning to base a dedicated aircraft in Tabriz to service both East and West Azarbaijan provinces.
The program is expected to run until mid-May using both aircraft and drones. Cloud seeding, Javadianzadeh added, is internationally recognized as a cost-effective tool for atmospheric water harvesting.
“Cloud seeding has been shown to increase precipitation and is used around the world not only to enhance rainfall but also to suppress hail, disperse fog and increase hydropower reserves,” he said.
But he warned that the technology has limits and requires clear public messaging: “If the issue is not explained properly, expectations beyond the capacity of the technology or disappointment with it may emerge among society and decision-makers.”
People shop water storage tanks following a drought crisis in Tehran, Iran, November 10, 2025.
Cloud seeding widely used, but not a cure-all
Cloud seeding is used in more than 50 countries, including the United States, China, Australia and several Middle Eastern states. Scientific reviews suggest that under favorable atmospheric conditions the process can boost precipitation by 5 to 15 percent, though results vary widely and remain difficult to measure precisely.
Iran’s neighbors – especially the United Arab Emirates and Saudi Arabia – have expanded large-scale seeding programs, with the UAE carrying out more than 200 missions a year and investing in drone-based techniques similar to those Iran has begun deploying.
Experts say that while cloud seeding can marginally increase rainfall, it cannot compensate for decades of overuse, aquifer depletion and climate-driven aridity across the region.
People pray for rain following a drought crisis at Imamzadeh Saleh shrine in Tehran, Iran, November 14, 2025.
Prayers for rain held nationwide
The new operations come as Iran faces what water specialists describe as a nationwide emergency. Reservoirs supplying Tehran are at or near historic lows, and authorities warn the capital could face extensive rationing if winter rains fail. Some neighborhoods have already reported intermittent cuts.
This week, cities across Iran held rain-seeking prayers as clerics urged the faithful to perform the traditional salat al-istisqa amid the worsening drought.
In Tehran, worshippers gathered at the Imamzadeh Saleh shrine in the north of the capital on Friday. Similar ceremonies were held in Mashhad, Qom and Qazvin.
Ayatollah Abdollah Javadi Amoli said the prayer is “asking for water in all forms, not just rain,” calling it a moment for repentance and unity as water shortages deepen nationwide.
Children play in Tajrish Bazaar in Tehran, Iran, November 14, 2025.
Experts say Iran is experiencing “water bankruptcy,” a condition in which consumption has exceeded renewable supply after decades of over-pumping, large-scale basin transfers and agricultural expansion.
Northwestern Iran has been among the hardest-hit regions. Lake Urmia’s collapse has triggered expanding salt storms that have damaged farmland and forced some residents to leave nearby villages, according to local media and environmental researchers.
Officials say unauthorized wells and heavy irrigation remain major drivers of groundwater decline.
Meteorological officials say rainfall so far this autumn is nearly 90% below long-term averages, making it the driest season in half a century.
Government spokesperson Fatemeh Mohajerani said on Tuesday that fuel quotas will stay in place for now, with monthly allocations of 60 liters at 15,000 rials ($0.013) and 100 liters at 30,000 rials ($0.027) continuing as before.
But she said Iran is being forced to spend $6 billion on gasoline imports this year as consumption soars past domestic output.
“It is natural that when foreign currency that should be used for other priorities is instead spent on gasoline – and some of this gasoline is smuggled – the government is obliged to act,” she said.
Mohajerani added that ministers must protect both the public’s livelihood and the country’s health and safety.
She said the government is preparing “serious programs” to curb fuel smuggling and added that the president has ordered automakers to expand production of low-consumption vehicles. “He made it clear they are required to manufacture more fuel-efficient cars,” she said.
Mohajerani also said that officials have examined the inflationary impact of potential adjustments but stressed that no final decision has been made on introducing a third pricing tier, one of several fuel-reform scenarios under discussion.
Her comments come as President Masoud Pezeshkian and senior lawmakers warn that the country cannot maintain ultra-cheap fuel indefinitely. Energy officials say domestic consumption has surged well beyond refining capacity, forcing costly imports and widening the subsidy gap.
Iran’s last major gasoline price hike in 2019 triggered nationwide protests in which at least 1,500 people were killed, according to rights groups and Reuters reporting at the time. The government says any future change will be gradual and tied to broader energy-sector reforms to avoid a repeat of that unrest.
New prices appear in Iran Energy Exchange
A few hours after Mohajerani’s press conference, new signs emerged that Iran is edging toward the higher fuel pricing.
The Iran Energy Exchange announced it will begin offering premium gasoline as of early December with a base price of 658,000 rials per liter (about 58 US cents) and a final settlement price of roughly 750,000 rials (around 67 cents) once additional costs are included.
The notice – the first such listing for premium fuel – immediately drew attention because the exchange price is more than ten times the current subsidized pump rate, adding to expectations that Tehran is preparing the ground for broader fuel-price reform.