Industrial titan Aliko Dangote has announced an audacious expansion of his $20 billion Lagos refinery, targeting an output of 1.4 million barrels per day (bpd) — positioning the complex among the largest globally.
The move, he said, reflects confidence in Nigeria’s economic potential and aims to meet the continent’s soaring energy demand.
A $5 billion loan facility, led by the African Export-Import Bank, is being finalized to fund the buildout. Dangote also revealed plans to list up to 10% of the refinery on the Nigerian Exchange (NGX) by 2026.
From Import Dependence to Industrial Sovereignty
Nigeria’s fuel import bill once drained over $10 billion annually. With Dangote’s plant already meeting nearly half of domestic gasoline demand, expansion could make the country a net exporter of refined fuel by 2027.
The refinery’s shift to Euro VI fuel standards also means cleaner combustion and fewer carbon emissions, aligning with global environmental benchmarks.
Strategic Leverage
- Economic: Projected $55 billion annual revenue post-expansion.
- Jobs: 30,000 direct and indirect jobs across logistics, retail, and engineering.
- Currency: Potential $12 billion in annual forex savings.
From Crude Nation to Refined Power
This expansion marks more than industrial ambition; it is symbolic statecraft. Nigeria is attempting to convert its biggest liability — crude export dependence — into continental leverage. Dangote’s refinery, once a national gamble, now represents a pivot from vulnerability to dominance..
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