Price rises at the checkout. Credit: Alexanderstock23 – Shutterstock
Shoppers can’t help but notice the rise in prices at the checkout. The escalating conflict in Iran is now inflating everyday purchases through higher costs on food, packaging and clothing, but how?
Rocketing prices of raw materials, oil, natural gas, aluminium and sulphur are driving these increases since they remain vital for manufacturing, creating plastic containers derived from petroleum and producing synthetic fibres such as polyester, as well as in fertilisers that are essential to harvests.
Preliminary March Consumer Price Index data landed like a cold shower after prices jumped 3.3 per cent, one full point above February levels because of petrol costs. Consumer organisations, including the OCU in Spain, have already sounded alarms following their calculation of a 1.58 per cent rise in the shopping basket during the past thirty days since the beginning of the war.
Representatives from the Spanish Federation of Food and Drink Industries are voicing serious worries about energy price effects together with operational difficulties caused by suspended shipping routes and redirected cargo that heighten logistical and commercial uncertainty.
Plastic packaging raw materials climb by up to 50 per cent
Direct pressure is now hitting production of containers for many consumed foods because petroleum-derived plastics are facing sharp cost increases. Plastic raw material prices are said to have risen above 30 per cent and in some cases reached 50 per cent. Manufacturing expenses are climbing accordingly.
Support for plastic processing firms across Spain counts as essential so they continue supplying containers required for food distribution and transport. Some are calling for mechanisms that offset cost rises and sustain industrial activity while pointing out that lightweight plastics exert a smaller final impact than energy or freight charges.
Fast fashion sector acts as early warning signal
Petroleum derivatives also feature heavily in textiles where Spanish giants Inditex and Mango operate. Materials such as polyester, nylon and acrylic appear in countless garments within fast fashion ranges.
Shoppers may begin to notice the effect in the aisles of fashion houses. Companies such as Inditex with their “just-in-time” manufacturing ethos, could begin to suffer from delays in the supply chain soon.
Fertiliser disruptions pose risks to agricultural output
One shortage that may radically affect the US’s war policy is fertilisers, but not before we have felt their impact at the supermarket. Needed to maintain field production and fight crop diseases, shortages will lower harvests and push food prices higher, especially with volatile trade barriers for exporters and importers.
Spain used 4.42 million tonnes of agricultural fertilisers throughout 2024, according to official records. The National Association of Fertiliser Manufacturers acknowledges that the Iran conflict will create a very significant global supply impact because the Strait of Hormuz ranks among the most strategic maritime chokepoints. Iran, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates and Bahrain together account for half the world sulphur trade, 23 per cent of ammonia, 34 per cent of urea and 18 per cent of ammonium phosphates, all used in fertilisers.
The war in the Middle East appears to be far from over, and no matter how geographically far we may be from the frontline, where we will begin to feel it most is at the checkout.