“Wars fought thousands of kilometres away often arrive quietly in the fields of farmers who never heard the first gunshot.” – anonymous
The escalating confrontation involving Iran, Israel, and the United States may appear distant from the rural landscapes of Nigeria. But in today’s interconnected global economy, wars do not remain confined to battlefields. They travel through energy prices, shipping routes, financial markets, and supply chains. And ultimately, they arrive where few people expect them, in the fields of farmers.
For Nigeria, the timing of this conflict could not be worse. The dry-season irrigation farming cycle across Nigeria has just begun. From the irrigation schemes along the Hadejia–Jama’are Basin to the Fadama fields around the Benue valley and the vast agricultural plains of Bauchi, Kebbi, Gombe and many states, farmers are now planting vegetables, wheat, rice, onions, and tomatoes.
These crops play a critical role in Nigeria’s food system. Irrigation farming fills the supply gap between the rainy seasons and provides much of the vegetables consumed in Nigerian cities. But the unfolding Middle East conflict is threatening this production cycle through a chain of economic shocks.
The first impact is energy. The conflict has raised fears of disruptions around the strategically vital Strait of Hormuz, the narrow maritime passage through which a significant share of the world’s oil supply passes every day. Any instability there immediately sends shockwaves through global energy markets. When global oil prices rise, fuel becomes more expensive everywhere, including in Nigeria.
For the Nigerian farmers, this is not merely an energy story. It is an agricultural one. Irrigation farming in Nigeria depends heavily on diesel or petrol-powered pumps that draw water from rivers, dams, and tube wells. When fuel prices rise sharply, irrigation becomes more expensive. A farmer who previously irrigated two hectares of tomatoes may now reduce cultivation to one hectare. Others may even abandon irrigation entirely. The result is simple: less land under cultivation and less food produced. This is at a time when Nigeria desperately needs more food production, but higher fuel costs is threatening to reduce it.
Energy is only the first layer of the crisis but fertilizer cost is another silent shock. Fertilizer production depends heavily on natural gas and petroleum derivatives. When energy prices spike, fertilizer production becomes more expensive. Shipping disruptions caused by geopolitical tensions also tighten global supply. Nigeria is not insulated from these shocks.
Even before this conflict, fertilizer prices were already high for Nigerian farmers. The rising cost of fertilizer inputs now threatens to push prices even further upward. For crops grown under irrigation particularly onions, tomatoes, peppers, and wheat fertilizer application is essential for achieving good yields. If fertilizer becomes too expensive, farmers apply less. Lower fertilizer application inevitably means lower productivity. And when productivity drops across thousands of farms, national food supply begins to shrink.
The third impact of the conflict lies in transportation. Diesel powers Nigeria’s agricultural logistics chain. It fuels tractors, irrigation pumps, harvest machinery, and the trucks that transport produce from farms to markets. Vegetables grown in Kano or Sokoto travel hundreds of kilometres before reaching consumers in Abuja, Lagos, and other urban centres.
Whenever the price of diesel rises the cost of transporting food rises as well. Traders respond by increasing market prices. Consumers pay more for tomatoes, onions, vegetables, and grains. In other words, the economic impact of the war moves steadily through the system from global oil markets to fuel pumps, from fuel pumps to farms, and from farms to household kitchens.
This is a dangerous period for Nigeria, the current crisis arrives at a particularly vulnerable moment for Nigeria. Food inflation has been one of the most pressing economic challenges facing the country. Many households already spend a large share of their income on food.
If irrigation production declines due to rising input costs, the consequences will quickly become visible in markets. Prices of vegetables and grains will rise further, placing additional pressure on millions of Nigerian families.
Ironically, Nigeria may benefit from higher crude oil revenues as global prices rise. Yet the same oil price surge can worsen food inflation domestically. This paradox highlights a structural vulnerability: Nigeria remains highly exposed to global energy shocks even though it is itself an oil-producing country.
The deeper lesson from the conflict involving Iran, Israel, and the United States is that food security can no longer be viewed purely as an agricultural issue. It is also an energy issue, it is a trade issue, and increasingly, it is a geopolitical issue.
The military escalation in the Middle East can determine the cost of irrigation in Nigeria. Shipping disruptions in the Persian Gulf can influence the price of fertilizer used by Nigerian farmers. In an interconnected world, agriculture is now tied directly to global political stability.
This emerging reality demands proactive policy responses. First, Nigeria must protect irrigation and other farmers from sudden energy price shocks. Targeted support mechanisms such as fuel stabilisation programmes for irrigation clusters could help farmers maintain production during periods of global volatility.
Second, the country must accelerate efforts to expand domestic fertilizer production and build strategic fertilizer reserves. Reducing dependence on imported inputs will strengthen resilience against global disruptions.
Third, Nigeria must invest more aggressively in modern irrigation systems powered by renewable energy such as solar pumps. This would reduce farmers’ dependence on diesel and petrol.
Finally, policymakers must begin to treat agriculture as a strategic national security priority rather than merely a rural development issue because when distant wars begin to determine the cost of food at home, agriculture becomes inseparable from national stability.
The Iran–Israel–America conflict is unfolding thousands of kilometres away, but its echoes are already reaching Nigeria’s farmlands. With rising fuel prices, fertilizer shortages, and transport costs threatening irrigation farming just as the season gathers momentum.
If the crisis persists, Nigerian farmers may produce less food at precisely the moment the country needs more. And when farmers produce less, the entire nation pays the price.
Ahmad resides at FMA2, off Yaya (Petel) Abubakar Road Fadamar Mada, Bauchi
