ECONOMY — February 26, 2026

Iran Reports 17-Fold Increase in Rail Shipments to Afghanistan

Iran reports a 17-fold surge in rail shipments to Afghanistan, with goals for further increases, while Uzbekistan aims for $5 billion in bilateral trade and Pakistan resumes transit cargo movements to its ports.

The Ehtebar Desk — originates with Ariana News2 min read

Iran Reports 17-Fold Increase in Rail Shipments to Afghanistan
Image courtesy Ariana News

Iranian officials announced that rail exchanges between Iran and Afghanistan have increased 17-fold this year. Shahriar Naghizadeh, head of Iran's external rail trade, told IRNA that from the first of Hamal to the fifth of Hoot, 650,000 tons of goods were transported by rail to Afghanistan. He noted that at least 150,000 tons of these were transit shipments from other countries through Iran to Afghanistan. Naghizadeh stated Iran's goal for the Iranian year 1405 is to move 2 million tons of cargo through the Shumtegh border, which he described as achievable.

Mahmoud Siadat, head of the Iran-Afghanistan Joint Chamber of Commerce, said Tehran is exploring ways to deepen economic ties with Afghanistan, focusing on contract farming and trade. He mentioned ongoing discussions about formally recognizing the Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan, noting that such recognition could boost investor confidence and facilitate long-term projects, including rail lines connecting Iran to China via Afghanistan. Siadat highlighted improving relations between Kabul and Tehran despite the lack of recognition. Iran exports over $3 billion in goods and services, including technical and engineering services, to Afghanistan annually, while Afghanistan's exports to Iran are estimated at around $100 million.

Siadat identified agriculture as a key growth area, with plans for contract farming where Iranian companies provide technology, expertise, and purchase guarantees for Afghan agricultural and livestock products. He said, "Instead of importing pulses from Canada, we can source them from Afghanistan," adding that structured cooperation would benefit both countries. He also pointed to remittances from Afghans working in Iran as evidence of strong economic ties, emphasizing that trade remains robust even without formal diplomatic recognition.

Separately, Uzbekistan's Deputy Prime Minister Jamshid Khojaev announced a goal of $5 billion in bilateral trade with Afghanistan following a video conference with Afghan Minister of Industry and Commerce Nooruddin Azizi. Khojaev noted trade has risen 2.5-fold over five years, from $653 million in 2021 to about $1.7 billion in 2025. The two sides discussed practical steps for expansion, including an Afghan delegation visit post-Ramadan, a trade forum in Kabul, and a roadmap.

Pakistan's Federal Board of Revenue confirmed the "reverse transfer" of Afghanistan's stranded transit cargo from Chaman and Quetta to Karachi and Qasim ports for re-export, after months of halt due to border closures since last Miizan amid conflicts.

Read the original reporting at Ariana News

Reliability assessment

Single source with direct, on-record attributions to named officials (Naghizadeh to IRNA, Siadat, Khojaev on social media with Azizi, Pakistani FBR) providing concrete details like specific tonnage (650,000 tons), trade figures ($3B/$100M, $5B goal), timelines, and locations.

The source language reads straight.

Across the newsrooms

Filed by

Filed under

EconomyIran, Afghanistan trade, Uzbekistan, Pakistan, rail transport

Spotted an error or have more on this story? Tip the desk on Telegram → or WhatsApp →.

Reader supported

Keep Ehtebar running

Every published story uses paid tools to translate reporting, compare sources, extract claims, and produce a clearer read on Afghanistan. Reader support helps keep that work independent.

€5

helps cover daily verification runs

€15

supports a week of source comparison

€50

keeps independent analysis moving