Opium farming in Afghanistan shrank by a fifth in 2025, UN survey finds

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An Afghan man works on a poppy field in Nangarhar province, Afghanistan April 20, 2016. REUTERS/Parwiz      TPX IMAGES OF THE DAY

The 20 per cent reduction in the area under cultivation follows a 19 per cent rebound in 2024.

PHOTO: REUTERS

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VIENNA – The total area of land in Afghanistan on which opium poppy is grown shrank 20 per cent in 2025, according to a UN estimate issued on Nov 6, a further drop since farming of the raw material for heroin collapsed in 2023 after the Taliban banned it.

The United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) said its annual survey of opium poppy cultivation in Afghanistan, long the world’s dominant producer, had found the harvest had shrunk even faster, falling an estimated 32 per cent to 268,526kg.

The 20 per cent reduction in the area under cultivation follows a 19 per cent rebound in 2024. Those fluctuations are a mere fraction of the massive drop in 2023 that followed the Taliban’s announcement in 2022 that it was outlawing narcotics production.

“The total area under opium poppy cultivation in 2025 was estimated at 10,200ha, 20 per cent lower than in 2024 (12,800ha) and a fraction of the pre-ban levels recorded in 2022, when an estimated 232,000ha were cultivated nationwide,” the UNODC said in a statement.

At the same time, despite the smaller harvest, the price for dry opium fell 27 per cent to US$570 (S$744) per kilogram, it added.

That “suggests a shift in market dynamics and might trigger an increase in attempts to cultivate illicit opium in other countries”, it said, adding: “Cultivation data, together with prices and seizures, signal fundamental changes in drug markets and trafficking in and around Afghanistan.”

The production of synthetic drugs, particularly methamphetamine, has continued to increase since the ban, the UNODC said.

“As agricultural-based opiate production declines, synthetic drugs appear to have become the new business model for organised crime groups, due to the relative ease of production, the greater difficulty in detection and relative resilience to climate changes,” it added. REUTERS

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