• About
  • Advertise
  • Contact
Wednesday, July 23, 2025
  • Login
Vital News
  • Frontpage
  • Business
  • Economy
  • Politics
  • National
  • Opinion
  • Sports
  • More
    • Crime
    • Judiciary
    • Security
No Result
View All Result
  • Frontpage
  • Business
  • Economy
  • Politics
  • National
  • Opinion
  • Sports
  • More
    • Crime
    • Judiciary
    • Security
No Result
View All Result
Vital News
No Result
View All Result
Home Oil & Gas

Africa Losing $90bln Annually To Importation Of Substandard Fuel, Dangote Laments

…says Dangote Refinery imports 9-10mln barrels of crude monthly from US, others

Vital News by Vital News
July 22, 2025
in Oil & Gas
0
Dangote Spends N720bln To Acquire 4,000 CNG Trucks, Begins Free Distribution Of Fuel August 15
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

Africa is increasingly becoming a dumping ground for cheap, often toxic petroleum products, the President/Chief Executive, Dangote Industries Limited, Aliko Dangote, has said.

According to him, many of the toxic imported petroleum products which are blended to substandard levels would not be permitted in Europe or North America.

Dangote raised the concern during the ongoing West African Refined Fuel Conference holding in Abuja.

The event is organised by the Nigerian Midstream and Downstream Petroleum Regulatory Authority (NMDPRA) and S&P Global Commodity Insights.

Dangote revealed that, due to the continent’s limited domestic refining capacity, Africa imports over 120 million tonnes of refined petroleum products annually, at a cost of approximately $90 billion.

RelatedStories

NOGASA Expresses Concern Over Dangote’s Direct Fuel Supply Plan To End Users

Dangote Urges Wealthy Nigerians To Invest More In Nigeria To Aid Growth, Development

Africans In Position To Develop Africa, Dangote Tells Global CEOs

After Failed Rehabilitation Efforts, NNPC May Sell Port Harcourt, Warri, Kaduna Refineries – Ojulari

While appreciating the Management of the Nigerian National Petroleum Company Limited (NNPC), for making some cargoes of Nigerian crude available to US from start of production to date, he revealed that the company, monthly imports between 9-10 million barrels of crude from the United States of America and other countries.

He said : “As we speak today, we buy 9 – 10 million barrels of crude monthly from US and other countries.

“I must thank NNPC for making some cargoes of Nigerian crude available to us from start of production to date.”

Dangote further stated that despite producing around seven million barrels of crude oil per day, Africa only refines about 40% of its 4.3 million barrels daily consumption of refined products domestically.

In stark contrast, Europe and Asia refine over 95% of what they consume.

“So, while we produce plenty of crude, we still import over 120 million tonnes of refined petroleum products each year, effectively exporting jobs and importing poverty into our continent.

“That’s a $90 billion market opportunity being captured by regions with surplus refining capacity.

“To put this in perspective: only about 15% of African countries have a GDP greater than $90 billion.

“We are effectively handing over an entire continent’s economic potential to others—year after year,” he said.

While reaffirming his belief in the power of free markets and international cooperation, Dangote emphasised that trade must be grounded in economic efficiency and comparative advantage — not at the expense of quality or safety standards.

He stressed that : “it defies logic and economic sense for Africa to be exporting raw crude only to re-import refined products—products we are more than capable of producing ourselves, closer to both source and consumption.”

Reflecting on the experience of delivering the world’s largest single-train refinery, Dangote also highlighted a range of challenges faced, including technical, commercial, and contextual hurdles unique to the African landscape.

Africa’s wealthiest man described building refineries such as the Dangote Petroleum Refinery as one of the most capital-intensive and logistically complex industrial facilities ever constructed.

The Dangote refinery project, he said, required clearing 2,735 hectares of land (seven times the size of Victoria Island), of which 70% was swampy, requiring the pumping of 65 million cubic metres of sand to stabilise the site and raise it by 1.5 metres, over 250,000 foundation piles, and millions of metres of piping, cabling, and electrical wiring among others.

“At peak, we had over 67,000 people on-site of which 50,000 are Nigerians, coordinating around the clock across hundreds of disciplines and nationalities.

“Then, of course, came the COVID-19 pandemic which set us back by two years and brought new levels of complexity, disruption, and risk. But we persevered,” he noted.

“The refinery also required the construction of a dedicated seaport, as existing Nigerian ports could not handle the size and volume of equipment required.

“This included over 2,500 pieces of heavy equipment, 330 cranes, and even the establishment of the world’s largest granite quarry, with a production capacity of 10 million tonnes per year.

“In short, we didn’t just build a refinery—we built an entire industrial ecosystem from scratch,” he said.

Despite the refinery’s technical success, Dangote identified significant commercial challenges, particularly exchange rates which have gone from N156/$ at inception to N1,600/$ at completion, and challenges around crude oil sourcing.

“Although Nigeria is said to produce about 2 million barrels per day, the refinery has struggled to secure crude at competitive terms.

“Rather than buying crude oil directly from Nigerian producers at competitive terms, we found ourselves having to negotiate with international trading companies, who were buying Nigerian crude and reselling it to us—with hefty premiums, of course.

“Logistics and regulatory bottlenecks have also taken a toll. Port and regulatory charges reportedly account for 40% of total freight costs, sometimes costing two-thirds as much as chartering the vessel itself.

“Refiners in India, who purchase crude oil from regions even farther away, enjoy lower freight costs than we do right here in West Africa because they are not saddled with exorbitant port charges,” Dangote said.

He added that, in terms of port charges, it is currently more expensive to load a domestic cargo of petroleum products from the Dangote Refinery, as customers pay both at the point of loading and at the point of discharge.

In contrast, when they load from Lomé, which competes with them, they pay only at the point of discharge.

Dangote further criticised the lack of harmonised fuel standards across African nations, which creates artificial barriers for regional trade in refined products.

“The fuel we produce for Nigeria cannot be sold in Cameroon or Ghana or Togo, even though we all drive the same vehicles.

“This lack of harmonisation benefits no one—except, of course, international traders, who thrive on arbitrage.

“For local refiners like us, it fragments the market and imposes unnecessary inefficiencies.”

Dangote, stating the challenge with diesel production in Africa, noted, “to give one example, the diesel cloud point for Nigeria is 4 degrees.

“Without going into the technical details, this means that the diesel should work at a temperature of 4 degrees centigrade.

“Achieving this comes at a cost to us and limits the types of crude we could process.

“But how many places in Nigeria experience temperatures of 4 degrees?

“Other African countries have a more reasonable range of 7 to 12 degrees.

“This is a low hanging fruit which could be addressed by the regulators.”

He also cited the growing influx of discounted, low-quality fuel originating from Russia — blended with Russian crude under price caps and dumped in African markets.

“And to make matters worse, we are now facing increasing dumping of cheap, often toxic, petroleum products—some of which are blended to substandard levels that would never be allowed in Europe or North America,” he said.

Dangote called on African governments to follow the example of the United States, Canada, and the European Union, which have implemented protective measures for domestic refiners.
(vitalnewsngr.com)

Tags: CrudeDangoteImportlaughing gas
Previous Post

Senate Debunks Reports On Creation Of New States

Next Post

Senate Confirms FG’s Readiness To Pay N-POWER Beneficiaries N81billion Backlog Allowances

Vital News

Vital News

RelatedStories

NOGASA Expresses Concern Over Dangote’s Direct Fuel Supply Plan To End Users
Oil & Gas

NOGASA Expresses Concern Over Dangote’s Direct Fuel Supply Plan To End Users

July 21, 2025
Dangote Urges Wealthy Nigerians To Invest More In Nigeria To Aid Growth, Development
Economy

Dangote Urges Wealthy Nigerians To Invest More In Nigeria To Aid Growth, Development

July 16, 2025
Africans In Position To Develop Africa, Dangote Tells Global CEOs
Business

Africans In Position To Develop Africa, Dangote Tells Global CEOs

July 14, 2025
After Failed Rehabilitation  Efforts, NNPC May Sell Port Harcourt, Warri, Kaduna Refineries – Ojulari
Oil & Gas

After Failed Rehabilitation Efforts, NNPC May Sell Port Harcourt, Warri, Kaduna Refineries – Ojulari

July 11, 2025
Dangote Spends N720bln To Acquire 4,000 CNG Trucks, Begins Free Distribution Of Fuel August 15
Oil & Gas

Dangote Refinery Reduces Petrol Price Again, Ex-depot Price Now N820 Per Litre

July 8, 2025
Next Post
Senate Confirms FG’s Readiness To Pay N-POWER Beneficiaries N81billion Backlog Allowances

Senate Confirms FG's Readiness To Pay N-POWER Beneficiaries N81billion Backlog Allowances

NDLEA, Police Service Commission Agree On Need To Conduct Drug Integrity Test For New Recruits

NDLEA, Police Service Commission Agree On Need To Conduct Drug Integrity Test For New Recruits

Kogi Records Lowest Out-of-School Rate In Northern Nigeria — Ododo’s Spokesperson

Kogi Records Lowest Out-of-School Rate In Northern Nigeria — Ododo’s Spokesperson

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Follow Us

Recommended

As Ogun Moves To Preserve Abeokuta-Sagamu Road  by Funmi Branco

Abiodun To Receive Silverbird Man of the Year Award March 3

1 year ago
We Are Not In Court Against INEC Chairman – DSS

DSS Busts Syndicate Selling New Naira Notes

2 years ago
Former Kogi Deputy Governor, Chief Patrick Adaba Dies At 78

Kogi HoS, Evinemi Mourns Passing Of Ex- Kogi Deputy Governor, Patrick Adaba

4 months ago

Easter : FG Declares April 7, April 10 Public Holiday

2 years ago

Instagram

    Please install/update and activate JNews Instagram plugin.

Categories

  • Agriculture/ Water/ Mineral
  • Aviation
  • Business
  • Crime
  • Culture
  • Economy
  • Education
  • Entertainment
  • Environment
  • Football
  • Foreign
  • Gender
  • Health
  • Judiciary
  • Labour
  • National
  • News
  • Oil & Gas
  • Opinion
  • Opinion
  • Politics
  • Power
  • Religion
  • Security
  • Sports
  • Transport
  • Uncategorized

Topics

Abiodun Abuja APC arrest Atiku Bandits Bello Benue Buhari CBN Court Dangote death dies drugs Economy EFCC Election elections FG gunmen Hajj INEC Kano kidnap Kill Kogi Kwara Lagos NDLEA Niger Nigeria Ododo Ogun Oyo PDP Police Power refinery rescue road Security Senate students Tinubu
No Result
View All Result

Highlights

NDLEA, Police Service Commission Agree On Need To Conduct Drug Integrity Test For New Recruits

Senate Confirms FG’s Readiness To Pay N-POWER Beneficiaries N81billion Backlog Allowances

Africa Losing $90bln Annually To Importation Of Substandard Fuel, Dangote Laments

Senate Debunks Reports On Creation Of New States

EFCC Presents More Witnesses In Ex-Kwara Gov. Ahmed’s Alleged N5.78bln Fraud Trial

2027 : Osun PDP Adopts President Tinubu, Gov. Adeleke As Candidates

Trending

Eid -el-Adha : Governor Abiodun Congratulates Muslims,Charges Them On Selflessness, Compassion
Aviation

The President Landed At Gateway Airport, And Floodgates Of Goodwill Were Opened By Kayode Akinmade

by Vital News
July 23, 2025
0

The President Landed At Gateway Airport, And Floodgates Of Goodwill Were Opened By Kayode Akinmade It is...

12 Suspected Kidnappers, One Informant Arrested In Kogi, Kwara

12 Suspected Kidnappers, One Informant Arrested In Kogi, Kwara

July 23, 2025
Kogi Records Lowest Out-of-School Rate In Northern Nigeria — Ododo’s Spokesperson

Kogi Records Lowest Out-of-School Rate In Northern Nigeria — Ododo’s Spokesperson

July 23, 2025
NDLEA, Police Service Commission Agree On Need To Conduct Drug Integrity Test For New Recruits

NDLEA, Police Service Commission Agree On Need To Conduct Drug Integrity Test For New Recruits

July 22, 2025
Senate Confirms FG’s Readiness To Pay N-POWER Beneficiaries N81billion Backlog Allowances

Senate Confirms FG’s Readiness To Pay N-POWER Beneficiaries N81billion Backlog Allowances

July 22, 2025
ADVERTISEMENT
Vital News

Vital News is an online newspaper with a mission to uphold professional journalism by reporting and publishing only facts and figures-based news reports across Nigeria and beyond.

Recent News

  • The President Landed At Gateway Airport, And Floodgates Of Goodwill Were Opened By Kayode Akinmade July 23, 2025
  • 12 Suspected Kidnappers, One Informant Arrested In Kogi, Kwara July 23, 2025
  • Kogi Records Lowest Out-of-School Rate In Northern Nigeria — Ododo’s Spokesperson July 23, 2025

Categories

  • Agriculture/ Water/ Mineral
  • Aviation
  • Business
  • Crime
  • Culture
  • Economy
  • Education
  • Entertainment
  • Environment
  • Football
  • Foreign
  • Gender
  • Health
  • Judiciary
  • Labour
  • National
  • News
  • Oil & Gas
  • Opinion
  • Opinion
  • Politics
  • Power
  • Religion
  • Security
  • Sports
  • Transport
  • Uncategorized

© 2022 Vital News - . All Rights Reserved.

No Result
View All Result
  • Frontpage
  • Business
  • Economy
  • Politics
  • National
  • Opinion
  • Sports
  • More
    • Crime
    • Judiciary
    • Security

© 2022 Vital News - Vital News by Vital News.

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In