IDNN Business/Energy Desk
Abuja’s Midnight Breakthrough
Nigeria’s most bitter labour clash in years has found a truce. After two marathon sessions stretching deep into the night, the Federal Government announced a peace deal between the Petroleum and Natural Gas Senior Staff Association of Nigeria (PENGASSAN) and the Dangote Petroleum Refinery.
Minister of Labour Mohammed Maigari Dingyadi revealed the deal in the early hours of Wednesday:
- Workers’ right to unionise acknowledged as sacrosanct.
- Sacked/refused staff to be redeployed across Dangote Group firms with no loss of pay.
- A pledge that no worker will face victimisation over their role in the strike.
- PENGASSAN to begin the process of calling off the nationwide shutdown.

The High-Stakes Mediation Table
The conciliation was heavyweight. Around the table sat:
- National Security Adviser Nuhu Ribadu
- Finance Minister Wale Edun
- Budget & Planning Minister Atiku Bagudu
- DG DSS Adeola Ajayi
- DG NIA Amb. Mohammed Mohammed
Their mission: prevent the strike from escalating into a full energy shutdown that had already cut power output to 2,700MW and blocked crude exports worth $110m daily.
Government: “Unionisation is a right. No worker will be punished. Stability has been restored,” Dingyadi .
Union: PENGASSAN conceded only after securing guarantees, signalling it will maintain vigilance.
Dangote Group: Silent but visibly relieved — the refinery avoided prolonged paralysis at a time it’s central to Nigeria’s fuel independence strategy.

Ripple: From Economic Blackout to Fragile Truce
The deal averts immediate disaster, but deeper questions linger:
- Foreign Labour Fears: PENGASSAN accused Dangote of replacing Nigerians with expatriates. Dangote denies it.
- Union Muscle vs Private Capital: The clash highlights unresolved tensions in Nigeria’s post-subsidy energy era.
- Government Leverage: FG stepped in only after investor panic mounted and power outages threatened stability.

Voices from the Battlefield
- Government: “Unionisation is a right. No worker will be punished. Stability has been restored,” Dingyadi said.
- Union: PENGASSAN conceded only after securing guarantees, signalling it will maintain vigilance.
- Dangote Group: Silent but visibly relieved — the refinery avoided prolonged paralysis at a time it’s central to Nigeria’s fuel independence strategy.
The Road Ahead
Analysts warn this is a truce, not a settlement. PENGASSAN has not dropped its larger campaign against perceived “union-busting” across the Dangote empire. And investors remain wary of labour power overwhelming private capital in strategic sectors.
With 2027 elections looming, Tinubu’s government will be judged on whether such peace deals stick or unravel.

Impact Snapshot
- Workers: Jobs saved via redeployment — a moral win for union.
- Refinery: Operations resume, but under closer government and union scrutiny.
- Economy: Avoided deeper losses, but scars remain on investor confidence.
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