At first glance, the Iran war looks like good news for oil producers like Nigeria. Rising tensions have pushed crude prices sharply higher, in some cases above $100 per barrel, which should boost government revenue.
But the reality is more complicated and closer to what Financial Times–style analysis highlights: the countries that suffer most are not always those that lose oil but those that cannot fully benefit from it.
Nigeria sits right in that category.
The country exports crude oil, yet still imports most of its refined fuel. This means higher global oil prices increase national income on paper, but raise petrol prices at home almost immediately.
That’s where the real cost shows up. Transport in Nigeria runs largely on fuel, so when petrol prices rise, food prices, transport fares, and business costs all rise together. This feeds directly into inflation and reduces what ordinary people can afford.
There’s also a second problem. Nigeria’s gains depend on stable oil flows and production levels, but conflict in the Middle East creates global uncertainty in supply chains and currency markets, which can weaken oil-dependent economies. Past episodes show that when oil prices later fall or stabilise, currencies like the naira often come under pressure.
So while major economies like the U.S. or China feel the war through inflation or trade disruptions, Nigeria faces a double hit:
higher living costs at home
unstable long-term oil revenue
In simple terms, the war creates what analysts call a “double-edged effect” for Nigeria more money for the government, but more hardship for citizens.
That is why, despite being an oil producer, Nigeria may end up paying one of the highest real prices for a war happening thousands of kilometres away.

