Syria regime revenues shrink as losses mount

Syria regime revenues shrink as losses mount

BEIRUT: With most of its natural and mineral resources having fallen under rebel control, Syrian state revenues have shrunk, leaving the government dependent on unstable sources of income for its survival.

Four years of conflict have decimated the state coffers.

Now the government’s only revenues are drawn from dwindling customs and income taxes, heavily bolstered by lines of credit from key regime backer Iran.

With the rise of the ISIS jihadi group, the regime has also lost control over swaths of vital resources – with two phosphate mines among its most recent losses.

According to local activists and the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, a Britain-based group that monitors the conflict, ISIS last weekend seized Sharqiya and Khneifess, 50 kilometers southwest of the ancient city of Palmyra in central Syria.

Both sites were run by the state and accounted for much of the regime’s last remaining exports.

An Oil Ministry official said Sharqiya produced at least 3 million tons of phosphate a year and Khneifess generated 850,000 tons.

Before the war broke out in 2011, Syria was the fifth-largest phosphate exporter in the world, mainly selling to Lebanon, Romania and Greece.

In the first quarter of 2015, Syria sold 408,000 tons of phosphate in total, on the domestic market and abroad, according to the ministry.

Phosphate sales raised some $39 million, with exports accounting for all but $4 million.

Already this year’s exports have less than halved from the 988,000 tons sold in the first three months of 2011 that brought in $63 million for the government.

However, with the loss of Sharqiya and Khneifess, prospects are dim for a government which projected income of $160 million in 2015 phosphate sales.

“For the state, whose resources are being depleted, it’s a net loss. In the current situation, any returns are important,” explained Jihad Yazigi, who runs Syria Report, an economic weekly.

Syria’s oil resources are not faring much better.

The regime had relied heavily on oil revenues, which brought in $3.8 billion in 2011, around a quarter of total state income.

But output took a drastic hit in 2011 when the European Union imposed an oil embargo to sanction the regime’s brutal repression of anti-government protests.

The cash-strapped government has since lost control of a string of oil fields to ISIS militants.

In 2013, ISIS militants seized all the fields in the oil-rich eastern province of Deir al-Zor, generating funds for the group’s operations.

By September 2014, ISIS was producing more oil than the regime: 80,000 barrels per day, compared to the government’s 17,000 bpd, the Oil Ministry said.

And by the end of last year, official production had plunged to 9,329 bpd, compared to prewar output of 380,000 bpd.

According to Syria Report, ISIS seized yet another oil field from the regime last week – Jazal, which produced 2,500 bpd.

So far, natural gas fields have been the least affected by ISIS’ rampage through Syria.

Oil Minister Suleiman al-Abbas said regime-controlled fields produce some 10 million cubic meters per day.

But the figure does not take into account the loss of Arak and Al-Hail, two fields in central Syria that IS overran earlier this month.

“Even if Syria had never exported its gas, it would still be crucial for electricity generation. Losing gas fields is a terrible blow to an already devastated economy,” Yazigi said.

Before its complex and multifront conflict broke out four years ago, Syria was a key exporter of agricultural products, textiles and leather, medicine, flowers and ceramic goods.

Total exports have plummeted from $11.3 billion in 2010 to $1.8 billion in 2014, according to the pro-government newspaper Al-Watan.

With export markets drying up, Syria has grown increasingly reliant on income taxes and customs, which brought in around $550 million in 2014, an official told AFP.

And Iran’s credit lines, which have provided at least $4.6 billion to President Bashar Assad’s regime, are part of a shrinking network of crucial but unstable revenue sources.

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