Sunday, March 15, 2026
33.3 C
Lagos

Business

‘Winning with Strategic Communications’ Launch, Targets Real-World Impact

Godfrey Adejumoh, a seasoned top-performing Global Business Communications Strategist...

Chowdeck Partners MyCoverGenius to Set New Standard for Rider Protection in Nigeria

Chowdeck, Africa’s leading on-demand delivery platform, has partnered with...

Tinubu Hails Nigeria-UAE Partnership as BUA Signs MoU with Abu Dhabi Ports, Mair Group

President Bola Ahmed Tinubu has commended the signing of...

Tinubu Hails BOI on N636bn Loan Disbursement to Businesses in 2025

President Bola Ahmed Tinubu has commended the Bank of...

Reputation Economy: How Nigerian Brands Won, Lost Public Trust in 2025

P + Measurement Services, Nigeria’s leading independent media intelligence...

ICT

Konga Partners Verve to Delight Customers with Free Shopping Vouchers

  Konga, Nigeria’s leading composite e-commerce platform has partnered with...

NCC Spotlights Renewable Energy on World Consumer Rights Day

  The Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC) has concluded arrangements to...

Governors, NCC Set for Broadband Awareness Forum Oct 20

All Nigeria State Governors are set to discuss how...

VerveLife 5.0 Gears Up for Nairobi, Lagos Events

Following a successful series of Verve Life 5.0 satellite...

Telecom Infrastructure Critical to Successful 2023 Elections – Danbatta

The Executive Vice Chairman of the Nigerian Communications Commission,...

Capital Market

NGX Group, IFC, CSCS, WIMBIZ Convene Leaders to Advance Gender Equality at 2026 Ring the Bell Ceremony

Nigerian Exchange Group Plc (NGX Group), in collaboration with...

NGX RegCo Issues Advisory on Recent Price Movements, Urges Informed Trading

NGX Regulation Limited (NGX RegCo), the independent regulatory arm...

Stanbic IBTC Nominees Celebrates 30 Years of Trust with Landmark Gala Event

Stanbic IBTC Nominees Limited marked a significant milestone on...

NGX GMD, Temi Popoola, Seeks Collaborative Alignment to Drive Sustainable Capital at IFC Confab

Temi Popoola, Group Managing Director and Chief Executive Officer...

AI: Powerful Tool for Economic Growth in Africa-NGX Chair, Umaru Kwairanga

 KEYNOTE SPEECH BY THE CHAIRMAN OF THE NIGERIA EXCHANGE...

Insurance

NAICOM: 20 Insurance Firms Seek Capital Verification Ahead July 31 Recapitalisation Deadline

The National Insurance Commission (NAICOM) says 20 operators in...

emPLE Partners Lagos State, Bastion Health for International Women’s Day “emPOWERHer” Health Drive

emPLE, one of Nigeria’s rapidly growing insurance companies, has...

SanlamAllianz Nigeria Pays over ₦77bn in 2025 Claims, Reinforces Financial Strength, Customer Trust

SanlamAllianz Nigeria, comprising SanlamAllianz Life Insurance and its subsidiary,...

AIICO 2026 Agency Retreat Honours Outstanding Sales Champions

Mrs. Ego Uzochukwu (Award Winner, centre); flanked on her...

Sovereign Trust Insurance Spreads Love with Fire Safety Drive

On Valentine's Day, Sovereign Trust Insurance Plc showed its...

Business

‘Winning with Strategic Communications’ Launch, Targets Real-World Impact

Godfrey Adejumoh, a seasoned top-performing Global Business Communications Strategist...

Chowdeck Partners MyCoverGenius to Set New Standard for Rider Protection in Nigeria

Chowdeck, Africa’s leading on-demand delivery platform, has partnered with...

Tinubu Hails Nigeria-UAE Partnership as BUA Signs MoU with Abu Dhabi Ports, Mair Group

President Bola Ahmed Tinubu has commended the signing of...

Tinubu Hails BOI on N636bn Loan Disbursement to Businesses in 2025

President Bola Ahmed Tinubu has commended the Bank of...

Reputation Economy: How Nigerian Brands Won, Lost Public Trust in 2025

P + Measurement Services, Nigeria’s leading independent media intelligence...

ICT

Konga Partners Verve to Delight Customers with Free Shopping Vouchers

  Konga, Nigeria’s leading composite e-commerce platform has partnered with...

NCC Spotlights Renewable Energy on World Consumer Rights Day

  The Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC) has concluded arrangements to...

Governors, NCC Set for Broadband Awareness Forum Oct 20

All Nigeria State Governors are set to discuss how...

VerveLife 5.0 Gears Up for Nairobi, Lagos Events

Following a successful series of Verve Life 5.0 satellite...

Telecom Infrastructure Critical to Successful 2023 Elections – Danbatta

The Executive Vice Chairman of the Nigerian Communications Commission,...

Capital Market

NGX Group, IFC, CSCS, WIMBIZ Convene Leaders to Advance Gender Equality at 2026 Ring the Bell Ceremony

Nigerian Exchange Group Plc (NGX Group), in collaboration with...

NGX RegCo Issues Advisory on Recent Price Movements, Urges Informed Trading

NGX Regulation Limited (NGX RegCo), the independent regulatory arm...

Stanbic IBTC Nominees Celebrates 30 Years of Trust with Landmark Gala Event

Stanbic IBTC Nominees Limited marked a significant milestone on...

NGX GMD, Temi Popoola, Seeks Collaborative Alignment to Drive Sustainable Capital at IFC Confab

Temi Popoola, Group Managing Director and Chief Executive Officer...

AI: Powerful Tool for Economic Growth in Africa-NGX Chair, Umaru Kwairanga

 KEYNOTE SPEECH BY THE CHAIRMAN OF THE NIGERIA EXCHANGE...

Insurance

NAICOM: 20 Insurance Firms Seek Capital Verification Ahead July 31 Recapitalisation Deadline

The National Insurance Commission (NAICOM) says 20 operators in...

emPLE Partners Lagos State, Bastion Health for International Women’s Day “emPOWERHer” Health Drive

emPLE, one of Nigeria’s rapidly growing insurance companies, has...

SanlamAllianz Nigeria Pays over ₦77bn in 2025 Claims, Reinforces Financial Strength, Customer Trust

SanlamAllianz Nigeria, comprising SanlamAllianz Life Insurance and its subsidiary,...

AIICO 2026 Agency Retreat Honours Outstanding Sales Champions

Mrs. Ego Uzochukwu (Award Winner, centre); flanked on her...

Sovereign Trust Insurance Spreads Love with Fire Safety Drive

On Valentine's Day, Sovereign Trust Insurance Plc showed its...

Dangote and the Nigeria Refinery Revolution

 

  • Beyond the Monopoly Myths

By Moses Braimah

When the Dangote Refinery began operations just over a year ago, Nigerians saw it as the dawn of a new industrial age.

After four decades of dependence on imported petroleum products, fuel subsidies, and the inefficiencies of state-owned refineries, the privately built $20 billion complex symbolised hope. Yet instead of celebration, the refinery has found itself at the centre of controversy – criticized, resisted, and even undermined by institutions that should be cheering its success.

For over two decades, Nigeria – Africa’s largest oil producer – has remained paradoxically dependent on imported refined petroleum products.

The nation’s four state-owned refineries, managed by the Nigerian National Petroleum Company Limited (NNPCL), have not refined a drop of crude for local consumption in nearly 20 years. Yet, billions of dollars have been spent maintaining them, sustaining an opaque importation regime rife with arbitrage, manipulation, and corruption.

Then came Dangote. When Aliko Dangote’s privately-owned refinery began production, it was hailed as the long-awaited messiah of Nigeria’s downstream sector.

The $20 billion facility – one of the world’s largest single-train refinery – promised to end fuel importation, conserve foreign exchange, and finally actualise Nigeria’s dream of energy independence. However, as operations began, a storm of resistance emerged – from vested interests, unions, and competing cartels.

NNPCL, surprisingly, fired the first shot, publicly alleging that Dangote’s refined products were of low quality. Kai!

The NNPCL, whose four state-owned refineries have not produced a litre of fuel for local consumption in nearly two decades, accused Dangote of producing “low-quality” refined products. This, from a company whose own importation structure has long been tainted by opacity, inflated figures, and allegations of corruption. The irony is difficult to ignore.

A Clash of Interests? The Dangote Refinery saga has become a case study in Nigeria’s struggle between progress and vested interests. From the Independent Petroleum Marketers Association of Nigeria (IPMAN) to PENGASSAN, NUPENG, PETROAN, and DAPPMAN, powerful lobbies are grappling for influence in a changing petroleum landscape. Some have focused on worker unionization and alleged disparities between local and expatriate salaries. But there’s little to suggest that Dangote has violated any recruitment or labor obligations. As one industry insider quipped, “It’s like witchcraft – when progress is in plain sight, some would rather destroy it than let it succeed.”

Luckily in the midst of these the government the renewed the Naira-for-Crude policy. Amid these tensions, the Federal Government’s decision to extend the Naira-for-Crude policy for another two years is both bold and pragmatic. The deal allows local refineries to pay for crude oil in naira rather than dollars – a move that protects foreign reserves, eases pressure on the exchange rate, and boosts local liquidity.

The impact of this policy in the past one year is palpable. Nigeria’s foreign exchange demand for fuel imports has reduced, while local supply of diesel, aviation fuel, and other by-products has improved. For an economy struggling with inflation and forex scarcity, this policy has become a stabilizing anchor, one that aligns energy production with fiscal responsibility.

Here comes the expansion, vision, and economic promise. In a striking display of ambition, Dangote Refinery is expanding its capacity from 650,000 barrels per day to 1.4 million barrels, which will make it become the largest refinery in the world.

This will surpass India’s Jamnagar Refinery. The expansion is expected to save Nigeria billions of dollars in foreign exchange, create more than 65,000 jobs during construction, and position the country as a major exporter of refined petroleum and petrochemicals.

Polypropylene production will increase from 900,000 to 2.4 million metric tonnes per year, supporting detergent, lubricant, and plastic industries. Additionally, Dangote plans to list 10% of the refinery’s shares on the Nigerian Stock Exchange, an uncommon gesture of transparency and inclusion in a sector notorious for opacity.

Still, some stakeholders have raised alarms over possible monopoly risks. That is where the need to balance the fear of monopoly with smart regulation.  Dangote’s dominance in cement, sugar, and now petroleum understandably fuels such apprehension.

Nevertheless, the antidote lies not in attacking progress or suppression but in insisting on smart regulation: policies that encourage more private refineries, ensure transparent pricing, innovation, quality, safety, more investments and guarantee open access to crude.

Nigeria must now pivot from suspicion to strategy, supporting new entrants while ensuring healthy competition. The vision should be clear: to transform Nigeria into Africa’s refining and petrochemical hub. Dangote’s ongoing expansion, including increased polypropylene and base oil production, underscores the vast potential of local refining to trigger industrial growth, job creation, and technology transfer.

A diversified refining base will foster competition, prevent market capture, and ensure that efficiency, not privilege, drives Nigeria’s energy market. As Dangote himself remarked, over 30 refinery licenses have been issued in Nigeria; it’s time for more of them to come alive.

He furthermore said: “When Africa builds its own capacity, it builds its own destiny.” This is apt.

On leadership and policy discipline.  We would realise that ultimately, this whole challenge boils down to leadership. The transformation of nations like Singapore, Rwanda, and China began with small circles of disciplined leaders who set clear visions and inspired the masses. Nigeria must embrace that same clarity.

From Obasanjo to Buhari and now Tinubu, the country’s petroleum narrative has oscillated between reform and regression. Today, with the refinery in full operation and policy support on the table, the administration has an opportunity to rebuild confidence, if only it governs with professionalism, fairness, and foresight.

This is also a call to build, not to break. For Aliko Dangote, the journey is far from over. His refinery stands as a symbol of what private enterprise can achieve when national interest meets vision and persistence. For government and other investors, it must serve as motivation – a model to emulate, not a monopoly to destroy.

Yes, Dangote’s journey is not without imperfections. But in the broader context of Nigeria’s economic history, it represents a decisive break from the past. A nation once enslaved by fuel importation is learning to refine its own destiny.

The task now is for Nigeria to multiply this momentum: to nurture new refineries, enforce smart oversight, and ensure that the gains reach every Nigerian consumer. If that alignment is achieved, the refinery could mark not just the end of fuel importation, but the beginning of Nigeria’s long-awaited economic rebirth.

If the government sustains its current energy reforms with professionalism and courage – ensuring fairness, enforcing standards, and encouraging competition – Nigeria’s refinery revolution could become a cornerstone of its economic revival.

For Dangote and the many refineries yet to rise, this is not just about profit; it’s about purpose, and the promise of a self-sufficient Africa taking charge of its future.

  • Braimah is an advocate for good governance and sustainable progress 

Dangote Refinery by the Numbers

  • Initial Capacity: 650,000 barrels per day
  • Expansion Target (2026): 1.4 million barrels per day — largest in the world
  • Investment Value: Over $20 billion
  • Foreign Exchange Savings: Estimated $15 billion annually
  • Jobs Created: 65,000 during expansion
  • Petrochemical Output: Polypropylene rising from 900,000 → 2.4 million metric tonnes/year
  • Local Workforce: 85% Nigerian staff
  • Share Listing: 10% to be listed on the Nigerian Stock Exchange within one year 

Policy Framework

  • Naira-for-Crude: Allows local refiners to pay for crude in naira, easing forex pressure
  • One-Stop Shop Policy: Simplifies approvals and promotes local refining investment
  • Government Goal: Make Nigeria Africa’s refining hub by 2030 

Economic Implications

  • Stabilizes naira exchange rate
  • Reduces dependence on fuel imports
  • Boosts energy security and industrial confidence
  • Encourages new entrants into refining sector

 

Hot this week

NGX Group, IFC, CSCS, WIMBIZ Convene Leaders to Advance Gender Equality at 2026 Ring the Bell Ceremony

Nigerian Exchange Group Plc (NGX Group), in collaboration with...

Union Bank of Nigeria Marks Int Women’s Month 2026 with Inclusion-First “Give to Gain” Campaign

L-R: Chief Talent Officer, Union Bank of Nigeria, Omayuli...

NAICOM: 20 Insurance Firms Seek Capital Verification Ahead July 31 Recapitalisation Deadline

The National Insurance Commission (NAICOM) says 20 operators in...

FG Inaugurates Committee on Grid Asset Management Company to Boost Power Sector

President Bola Tinubu has constituted an 11-member committee to...

Tinubu Approves Posting of 31 Career, 34 Non-Career Ambassadors

President Bola Ahmed Tinubu has approved the postings of...

Topics

Special Report: The Leading Insurance Companies in Nigeria

The Tunisian Federation of Insurance Companies “FTUSA” and Tunisian Reinsurance Company “TUNIS RE” are honored to host the 42nd AIO Conference and General Assembly from 24th to 27th May in Gammarth, Tunisia. The conference will be organised under the auspices of the African Insurance Organisation “AIO.” This conference presents a good opportunity for a valuable exchange of ideas and experiences in order to support business exchange between the different partners of our industry.

Enron: The Fall of A Wall Street Darling

Enron is a company that reached dramatic heights, only to face a dizzying collapse. The story ends with the bankruptcy of one of America's largest corporations. Enron's collapse affected the lives of thousands of employees, many pension funds and shook Wall Street to its very core. To this day, many wonder how a company so big and so powerful disappeared almost overnight. How did it manage to fool the regulators and the Wall Street community for so long, with fake off-the-books corporations?

Guild of Editors Condemns Nigerian Press Council Bill

The Standing Committee discussed the state of the nation...

3D Printing in Africa, Middle East Target $1.3bn in 2019

Spending on 3D printing in the Middle East and...

Business Journal Named ‘Best Financial Newspaper in Nigeria’

Business Journal has won international recognition as ‘Best Financial Newspaper in Nigeria’ in the 2015 International Finance Awards by Wealth & Finance International Magazine of the United Kingdom (UK). In the award letter to Business Journal, Jonathan Hicks, the Editor of Wealth & Finance International said: “Business Journal: You Are a Winner in the 2015 Finance Awards!

Microsoft, ISSAN Partner on Cyber Security Awareness

Leading ICT company, Microsoft has called on individuals and...

AMCON Acquired N3.7tr NPLs, Injected N2.2tr into 10 Banks

The Asset Management Corporation of Nigeria (AMCON) has so...
Exit mobile version