The Situation
The US-Israel-led conflict with Iran, now entering its fourth week, has effectively shut down commercial shipping through the Strait of Hormuz—the passage through which approximately 27% of global oil exports, 20% of LNG exports, and 30% of internationally traded fertiliser pass. Brent crude spiked above $116/barrel after Israel struck the South Pars gas field and Iran retaliated against Gulf oil refineries.
Impact on the Food Industry
Energy costs are the immediate concern. Rising oil and gas prices directly increase production costs for food manufacturers—especially energy-intensive categories like frozen goods, baked products, and chilled items. Logistics, transportation, and packaging costs are also climbing.
Fertiliser disruption is the medium-term risk. The Middle East accounts for approximately 40% of global fertiliser supply. With 3–4 million tonnes of fertiliser trade stalled per month, global nitrogen fertiliser prices have already spiked. If the crisis persists through spring planting season (March–May), reduced crop yields later in 2026 could drive a new wave of food commodity inflation.
The Middle East is a net food importer. Unlike the Russia-Ukraine crisis which disrupted grain exports, the Iran conflict primarily disrupts energy and fertiliser flows rather than food commodities directly. However, Gulf states that are major importers of processed food are facing supply disruptions, potentially creating demand shifts toward alternative, non-Gulf-routed suppliers.
⚠️ Industry Outlook
If the conflict is prolonged, food manufacturers face a pricing dilemma: absorb rising input costs (energy, packaging, logistics, fertiliser-driven raw material inflation) or pass them to consumers—at a time when consumer sentiment is already low and volumes are still recovering from previous inflation cycles.
Why Egypt-Based Sourcing Offers Resilience
For international buyers of processed food products, Egypt's position in this crisis is distinctly advantageous compared to Gulf-based or Gulf-routed suppliers:
Egypt ships through the Mediterranean, not the Strait of Hormuz. Egyptian processed food exports leave via Damietta, Alexandria, Safaga, and Cairo Airport—routes that are entirely outside the conflict zone. Buyers sourcing from Egypt avoid the shipping disruptions, insurance cost spikes, and transit delays affecting Gulf-routed trade.
Egypt is a net food exporter with a local raw material base. Unlike Gulf processing hubs that import raw materials, Egyptian processors like Saporina source from domestic farms. Tomatoes, strawberries, peppers, artichokes, olives, fruits, and pulses are all grown and processed locally—removing the import-dependency risk that is currently affecting Gulf-based food manufacturers.
Egypt's export infrastructure is proven at scale. With $6.8 billion in food exports in 2025, 275,000 tons shipped per week, and NFSA-regulated health certification for 176 destination countries, Egypt's food export system is operating well beyond the experimental stage.
🛡️ Key Takeaway for Procurement Teams
The Iran crisis is a reminder that supply chain geography matters. Egypt offers Mediterranean-routed, locally-sourced, fully-certified processed food exports that bypass the Strait of Hormuz entirely. For buyers currently sourcing from Gulf-based processors or through Gulf shipping routes, this is the moment to diversify toward Egypt as a resilient alternative origin.
Saporina: Mediterranean-Routed, Locally Sourced
Saporina sources all raw materials from Egyptian farms, processes in certified facilities, and exports through Mediterranean ports with full NFSA, EUR.1, COMESA, and market-specific documentation. No Strait of Hormuz dependency at any point in the supply chain.
📩 Diversify Your Supply Chain
Contact Saporina to discuss sourcing processed food products from Egypt—Mediterranean-routed, locally sourced, and fully documented. Industrial, HORECA, and retail formats with private label capability.