How Middle East war will affect African nations in the short-term, report reveals

African economies face the risk of a sharper growth slowdown this year if the war in the Middle East drags on, with prolonged disruption to trade, energy and fertiliser supplies threatening to ripple across the continent.

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The disruption of traffic in the Strait of Hormuz has severely affected fuel supply to many African nations. / Reuters

African economies face the risk of a sharper growth slowdown this year if the war in the Middle East drags on, with prolonged disruption to trade, energy and fertiliser supplies threatening to ripple across the continent, according to a report released on Thursday.

The report by two UN agencies, the African Union and the African Development Bank said African economies could lose 0.2 percentage points of GDP growth in 2026 if the conflict lasts more than six months.

"The longer the conflict lasts and the more severe the disruption to shipping routes and energy and fertiliser supplies, the greater the risk of a significant growth slowdown across the continent," the report said. It was presented at the UN's Economic Commission meeting in Tangier.

The report did not quantify the likely impact on inflation but warned the conflict could quickly turn into a cost-of-living crisis across Africa through higher fuel and food prices. It said some African states could be hit harder by fertiliser shortages than by higher oil prices.

Middle East accounts for a significant fraction of Africa's energy imports

"Disruptions to Gulf liquefied natural gas (LNG) supply would affect ammonia and urea production, raising fertiliser costs and constraining supply during the crucial March-to-May planting season," it said.

The Middle East accounts for 15.8% of Africa's imports and 10.9% of its exports, the report noted.

A "few countries", such as oil producer Nigeria and LNG exporter Mozambique, would benefit from higher prices, it said.

Rerouted transport is already increasing traffic through the Port of Maputo in Mozambique, Durban in South Africa, Walvis Bay in Namibia, and Mauritius, according to the report.

Logistics hub

"In East Africa, Kenya is emerging as a logistics hub through Lamu Port and Nairobi, while Ethiopia is benefiting from its role as the emergency air bridge linking Asia, Africa, and Europe through Ethiopian Airlines," it said.

The report further urged African governments to strengthen domestic revenue collection, coordinate fuel procurement and establish emergency food corridors, while saving windfall oil revenues and deploying targeted social protection measures.

Claver Gatete, the executive secretary of the UN Economic Commission for Africa, which co-authored the report, told journalists it was too early to quantify the impact of the war on African inflation and growth, or to determine which countries and sectors would be worst hit by the current crisis.