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How The War In Ukraine Began To Affect African Countries


Eight days into Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine, the fallout of the war and unprecedented sanctions on Moscow are shaking global supply chains and financial markets. With Russia a major producer of commodities such as oil, gas, aluminium, palladium, nickel, wheat and corn, sanctions and market concerns about the war’s disruption on supply chains have caused commodity prices to soar.


Surging commodity prices will create winners and losers across Africa and the world. On the continent, the countries most vulnerable to the conflict are those which import a large share of the wheat they consume, like Egypt.


Meanwhile, African oil importers like Kenya will also feel the heat of surging oil prices as Russia, one of the world’s largest exporters of crude, is hit by sanctions, disruptions to energy exports and a potential embargo.


Commodity exporters, like Nigeria and Angola, are likely to be the biggest winners of the war as the supply constraint-induced commodity price boom that began in 2021will be prolonged, says Renaissance Capital, a Moscow-headquartered bank.



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