By Ephraim Agbo
As the Strait of Hormuz remains closed and global oil prices surge past $100 per barrel, a complex and deeply uneven picture is emerging across the African continent. Africa presents a fundamental paradox in this crisis: it is simultaneously a net importer of refined petroleum products and home to some of the world's most significant crude oil exporters. This dual identity means the Iran war is not simply benefiting or harming the continent—it is doing both at once, often within the same country.
For Nigeria, Angola, Algeria, and Libya, the price surge represents a potential fiscal windfall that could transform struggling economies. For Kenya, South Africa, Senegal, and a dozen other import-dependent nations, the same price spike threatens to reignite inflation, deplete foreign reserves, and deepen the cost-of-living crisis that has already sparked protests across the region. And for ordinary households from Lagos to Nairobi to Dakar, the war being fought 5,000 kilometers away is arriving in the form of higher transport costs, more expensive food, and shrinking purchasing power.
This is the Africa paradox: a continent that produces 8 million barrels of oil daily, holds 125 billion barrels of proven reserves—7.5 percent of the global total—yet remains profoundly vulnerable to energy shocks because it exports crude and imports the refined products its people actually use . The Iran war is exposing this structural weakness with brutal clarity.
The Windfall States: Africa's Oil Exporters
Nigeria: The Dual Economy
Nigeria presents the most striking illustration of Africa's contradictory position. As Africa's largest oil exporter, Nigeria ships approximately 1.5 million barrels of crude daily to international markets . Its 2026 budget was constructed around a conservative benchmark of $64.85 per barrel . With Brent crude now trading above $100, the arithmetic of Nigerian public finance has transformed overnight.
The revenue implications are substantial. Every dollar above the budget benchmark flows disproportionately to government coffers through Nigeria's production-sharing contracts and tax regime. The Federation Account Allocation Committee, which distributes oil revenue among federal, state, and local governments, faces the welcome challenge of allocating unexpected billions . Foreign exchange reserves, depleted by years of central bank intervention to defend the naira, stand to benefit from increased dollar inflows.
Yet the windfall tells only half the story. Nigeria imports the vast majority of its refined petroleum products, having spent decades failing to maintain or modernize its four state-owned refineries. The new Dangote Refinery, a 650,000-barrel-per-day private facility that began operations in 2024, has reduced but not eliminated this dependency. Within the past week, the Dangote Refinery and filling stations across the country have adjusted petrol prices upward twice. Petrol that sold at N870 per liter before the war now sells at approximately N1,100—a 26 percent increase in days .
The result is a nation experiencing simultaneous fiscal expansion and household contraction. Government revenue rises while citizens' purchasing power falls. Transport costs increase, food prices follow, and the inflationary pressure compounds an already difficult cost-of-living environment. As Dr. Muda Yusuf, CEO of the Centre for Promotion of Private Enterprises, notes, "The net exchange rate impact will depend on the balance between stronger oil inflows and potential capital reversals" as geopolitical instability drives investors toward safe-haven assets .
Timing, however, has favored Nigeria in one respect. The state oil company NNPC is weeks away from launching exports of Cawthorne, a new light, sweet crude grade comparable to the country's flagship Bonny Light. First loadings are scheduled for late March from a floating storage vessel holding up to 2.2 million barrels. Analysts at energy intelligence firm Kpler estimate the new stream could lift Nigeria's combined crude and condensate output from roughly 1.65 million barrels daily to approximately 1.7 million barrels through year-end .
As one Lagos-based oil markets analyst put it: "Cawthorne arriving in this market, with Brent flirting with triple digits, could not be better scripted" .
Angola, Algeria, and Libya: The Other Beneficiaries
Nigeria is not alone among African producers poised to gain. Angola, sub-Saharan Africa's second-largest oil exporter, operates with similar budget assumptions that higher prices will now supersede. Algeria, a member of the OPEC+ group of eight countries receiving expanded production quotas, has based its 2026 finance law on an assumed price of $60 per barrel. With Brent at $100, the difference of $40 per barrel generates significant additional revenue for the Algerian state .
Libya presents a more complicated case. Possessing Africa's largest proven oil reserves, the country's production has been chronically disrupted by the security fragmentation that followed the 2011 NATO intervention. Current output fluctuates unpredictably as rival militias and governments contest control of fields and export terminals. Higher prices provide incentive for all parties to keep oil flowing—and for each to seek control of the revenue it generates.
Collectively, African OPEC members—Nigeria, Angola, Algeria, Libya, Congo, Gabon, and Equatorial Guinea—produce more than 8 million barrels daily . The recent OPEC decision to increase production quotas by 206,000 barrels per day in April explicitly opens the door to expanded African volumes .
The Vulnerability Belt: Import-Dependent Economies
Southern Africa: South Africa's Precarious Balance
For South Africa, the continent's most industrialized economy, the Iran war presents a complex and ambiguous threat. Unlike its northern neighbors, South Africa possesses no significant crude production but has developed sophisticated refining capacity that processes imported crude into finished products.
The rand, always sensitive to emerging-market sentiment, faces what BMI analysts describe as "neutral to weaker" risks from the conflict . Higher oil prices increase the country's import bill, putting pressure on the current account and, by extension, the currency. Simultaneously, geopolitical instability typically drives investors toward safe-haven assets like the US dollar and gold—and South Africa is a major gold producer.
This creates an unusual dynamic. South African gold producers such as Pan African Gold, Harmony Gold, and Sibanye-Stillwater are raking in increased revenues as bullion prices rise alongside oil. Yet this positive impact is "offset by rising imported energy costs" for the broader economy . Higher transport fuel costs feed through to inflation, potentially forcing the Reserve Bank to maintain or increase interest rates just as households face mounting living expenses.
South Africa's historically close ties with Iran add another layer of complication. BMI analysts warn that Pretoria's relationship with Tehran could "further strain relations with the US, pushing up political risks and weighing on foreign demand for South African assets" . For a country dependent on portfolio inflows to finance its current account deficit, this is not a trivial concern.
Peter Attard Montalto, managing director at South African advisory firm Krutham, offers a cautiously optimistic assessment: "So far the impact has really been muted, for countries like South Africa," noting that recent economic reforms have helped stabilize the currency and bond markets. "Still, higher oil and gas prices are expected to filter into inflation in the coming months" .
East Africa: Kenya and Uganda's Supply Anxiety
In East Africa, countries like Kenya and Uganda report that fuel supplies remain stable even as they work to ensure continuity . But stability should not be confused with immunity. Both nations import virtually all their refined petroleum requirements, paying in US dollars earned through exports of tea, coffee, tourism, and remittances.
When global oil supplies tighten, prices rise while African currencies often weaken as investors move funds into safe havens . This combination—more expensive oil paid for with depreciating currency—amplifies the impact of price spikes in import-dependent markets. Kenya, which has experienced significant currency pressure in recent years, faces particular vulnerability.
West Africa: Senegal's Frustrating Transition
Senegal illustrates a different kind of frustration. The country is in the process of becoming an oil and gas producer, with the Sangomar field having commenced production in 2024. Yet this transition offers no immediate protection from the current crisis.
Senegal imports nearly all of the refined petroleum it consumes. Fishing, agriculture, transport, electricity—all depend on imported fuel. A sharp increase in pump prices translates immediately into higher living costs, intensified electricity load-shedding, and rapid impoverishment of large segments of the population .
The country cannot yet refine its own crude or redirect its gas production toward domestic consumption. As Dakar-based economist Mor Gassama explains, "If the price of oil soars, it will impact the prices of food and all derivative products for Senegal as for the entire world. The longer the conflict lasts, the greater the threat of generalized inflation" .
The solution, Gassama argues, lies in enabling the Société Africaine de Raffinage to process Senegalese crude at scale, creating a buffer against global price shocks. Until then, Senegal remains what Dakar Actu calls "a silent hostage of a war that is not its own" .
North Africa: Egypt and Morocco's Import Burden
North Africa's non-oil economies face similar pressures. Egypt, which transitioned from energy exporter to importer over the past decade despite recent gas discoveries, confronts the prospect of higher import bills at a moment of acute foreign currency shortage. The country's currency has already lost more than half its value since 2022; additional pressure on the external accounts could force further devaluation.
Morocco, which imports over 90 percent of its energy requirements, faces the same dynamic. The country has invested heavily in renewable energy to reduce fossil fuel dependence, but the transition remains incomplete. Higher oil prices mean higher costs for transport, industry, and electricity generation—costs that will ultimately reach consumers.
The Most Vulnerable: IMF Program Countries and Fragile States
Analysts warn that countries already operating under International Monetary Fund programs face particular strain as higher energy import bills drain scarce foreign exchange reserves. Among the most vulnerable are Sudan, The Gambia, Central African Republic, Lesotho, and Zimbabwe .
Zimbabwe has already acted. The Zimbabwe Energy Regulatory Authority confirmed fuel price increases effective March 5 . For a country where hyperinflation is a living memory and dollarization has provided only partial stability, energy-driven price pressures threaten to unravel hard-won gains.
The Democratic Republic of Congo and Mauritius face vulnerabilities linked to potential energy shortages rather than merely price increases . The DRC's mining sector, critical to global battery supply chains, depends on reliable fuel supplies for operations. Disruptions could ripple through copper and cobalt production just as global demand for both accelerates.
Zambia presents another at-risk case. The kwacha is expected to weaken in an escalatory scenario, with higher energy prices inflating the import bill and reigniting domestic foreign exchange liquidity pressures. Moreover, Zambia has benefited from a surge in foreign demand for its assets, particularly domestic government debt. Renewed risk aversion would prompt capital outflows, exerting depreciatory pressure on the currency. Positively, elevated copper prices—another commodity benefiting from geopolitical uncertainty—could provide some support, limiting downside risks .
The Structural Problem: Refining Dependency
Beneath the country-by-country analysis lies a structural reality that explains Africa's paradoxical position. The continent produces millions of barrels of crude daily but lacks sufficient refining capacity to meet its own needs. It exports raw material and imports finished product, capturing only a fraction of the value chain and exposing itself to exactly the kind of price shock now underway.
The numbers tell the story. Africa holds 125 billion barrels of proven oil reserves—7.5 percent of the global total . Its producers include seven OPEC members. Yet according to the African Refiners and Distributors Association, the continent imports approximately 80 percent of its refined petroleum products, spending billions in foreign currency that could otherwise support domestic development.
This is not an accident of geology but a legacy of policy choices and infrastructure neglect. For decades, African governments and international oil companies focused on extraction rather than processing. Refineries, where they existed, suffered from poor maintenance, inadequate investment, and corruption. The result is a continent rich in crude but perpetually vulnerable to price shocks in global refined product markets.
The Iran war is exposing this vulnerability with unprecedented clarity. Every dollar increase in global oil prices translates directly into higher costs for African importers—and, through them, for African households. The continent's oil exporters, meanwhile, capture only the crude value, not the much larger refining margin.
The Household Impact: Where the War Really Arrives
For most African households, the Iran war will not be experienced as a geopolitical event but as a cost-of-living crisis. The transmission mechanism is brutally direct: most food and goods across Africa are transported by road. Rising fuel costs therefore feed quickly into broader inflation and reduce household purchasing power .
In Nigeria, petrol price increases from N870 to N1,100 per liter means higher costs for transport, for food distribution, for essential goods. In Senegal, higher import costs for refined products mean more expensive electricity, more expensive transport, more expensive everything. In Kenya, currency pressure combines with oil prices to squeeze households already struggling with the aftermath of COVID-19 and the 2022-2023 drought.
As one analysis puts it: "There is something profoundly unjust in what is unfolding. Africa is in no way responsible for the conflict between the United States, Israel, and Iran. And yet its populations could pay an exorbitant price" .
The Strategic Response: Diversification as Imperative
Over the longer term, analysts say the crisis may reinforce calls for African nations to diversify their energy systems and reduce dependence on imported fuels. "It makes strategic sense for African countries to ensure long-term energy security and sovereignty," says Kennedy Mbeva, a research associate at the Centre for the Study of Existential Risk at the University of Cambridge. Achieving that, Mbeva notes, will require balancing short-term fiscal pressures with long-term investments in clean energy and green industrialization .
The irony is that higher oil revenues for producing countries could fund precisely such diversification. Nigeria's unexpected windfall could finance investments in refining capacity, renewable energy, and the non-oil economy that would reduce future vulnerability. Angola's additional revenue could support economic transformation away from resource dependence. Algeria's gains could accelerate the transition to a more diversified economic model.
Whether these opportunities will be seized is another question. Past oil booms have produced consumption booms, corruption booms, and debt booms—but rarely structural transformation. The 1970s price surge, the 2000s commodity super-cycle, each promised to lift African economies and each left them fundamentally unchanged.
The Geopolitical Dimension: Africa's Choice
The Iran war also introduces geopolitical complications for African states. Nigeria, Angola, and other oil exporters find themselves in a position similar to Russia and Venezuela: benefiting from higher prices while navigating the politics of a conflict they did not choose. Western powers, desperate to secure alternative supplies to trapped Gulf barrels, are suddenly more attentive to African producers.
The European Union, which replaced Iranian crude with Nigerian imports during the 2012 embargo, may follow the same path. South Africa, which turned to Nigeria, Angola, and Saudi Arabia during previous disruptions, faces similar choices . Asian buyers, cut off from Gulf supplies, are looking to West Africa with renewed interest.
This attention brings opportunities—and risks. African producers could secure long-term supply contracts, investment in production capacity, and enhanced geopolitical standing. They could also find themselves drawn into great-power competition, forced to choose between Western and Eastern blocs, between the United States and China, between competing visions of global order.
For now, most African states are attempting to navigate a middle course. They welcome higher revenues and increased demand while avoiding entanglement in the conflict itself. Whether this posture remains sustainable as the war intensifies is uncertain.
Conclusion: The Uneven Continent
Ten days into the Iran war, one conclusion is inescapable: Africa is experiencing the conflict not as a single story but as a thousand different ones. Nigerian officials count windfall revenues while Nigerian families count rising costs. South African miners benefit from higher gold prices while South African motorists pay more for fuel. Senegalese fishermen face higher expenses while Senegalese politicians explain that their country's own oil cannot yet help them.
The continent that produces 8 million barrels daily remains a net importer of the refined products its people actually use. The continent with 125 billion barrels of reserves remains vulnerable to price shocks in markets it cannot control. The continent with seven OPEC members remains a price-taker rather than a price-maker in global energy markets.
This is the Africa paradox, and the Iran war is exposing it with brutal clarity. Whether the crisis becomes a catalyst for change or another missed opportunity depends on choices African governments make in the coming weeks and months. The revenue is flowing. The attention is focused. The need for transformation has rarely been clearer.
Whether this time will be different—whether African nations can finally break the cycle of extraction without transformation, of resource wealth without economic development—remains the continent's most urgent and unanswered question.
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