Jump to navigation

Nigeria

President Buhari opens Africa's biggest industrial project

Production and pricing questions haunt launch of Dangote's $20 billion refinery complex

Plagued by logistical obstacles, the pandemic and doubts about the future of Nigeria's fossil fuel industry, Aliko Dangote's mega fertiliser, petrochemical and oil refinery complex is still a gamechanger for the country's – and the region's – economy. On 22 May, outgoing President Muhammadu Buhari along with several regional leaders and top business figures formally commissioned the project.

It was the most political of opening ceremonies squeezed into the last days of Buhari's presidency before he hands over to Bola Ahmed Tinubu (also in attendance) on 29 May. Dangote's project, although most of it was financed commercially, fits neatly into Buhari's declared strategy of oil-fired industrialisation.

Eventually, Nigeria's state-owned oil company took a 20% stake in the project and guaranteed supplies of crude oil to the refinery and gas to the fertiliser and petrochemicals processing plants. Perhaps warned off by the history of Nigeria's state-owned refineries in Port Harcourt and Kaduna, Dangote has been careful to maintain managerial and financial control of the project throughout.

Despite Dangote's business acumen, demonstrated by his cement manufacturing empire and fast-rising agriculture and food processing operations, the refinery project is at least seven years behind schedule. And sceptics say that it will not reach commercial production levels for another year.

Some of that is down to logistics and testing the engineering. Then there is the question of securing guaranteed feedstock to operate the 650,000 barrels a day plant, one of the biggest in the world.

The commercial and fiscal status of the refinery is double-edged: on one hand it will save Nigeria importing over 400,000 barrels a day of refined petroleum products. But given the current oil production constraints, the national treasury will lose the revenue from exporting that oil for hard currency.

Should Nigeria win the investment to push oil production towards its target of 2.5 million barrels a day, the country would be a net winner from the refinery. That could take at least another five years.

Another threat to the project are the vested interests who make millions of dollars a day from importing refined fuel and who stand to lose their core income. Alongside those operations are the giant commodity companies such as Glencore and Trafigura who publicly claim they welcome the Dangote refinery and are adjusting their business models accordingly.

From the start, it seems the Dangote refinery will focus on production, leaving the more lucrative and less risky marketing and sales to the big commodity traders.



Related Articles

Economic giants change places

New trends in trade and finance will change political as well as economic ties on the continent

In the coming weeks, some statisticians in Abuja could shake up Africa’s economic and diplomatic hierarchy. The boffins look set to chart the rise of Nigeria’s economy to...

READ FOR FREE

Costly U-turn on killings

By rejecting the investigators' verdict on the Lekki shootings Governor Sanwo-Olu has lost voters' trust

A year after admitting that it was likely that the military had killed civilians at the Lekki toll gate in protest against police brutality in October 2020, the...


Islamists raise the stakes as they take on Yar'Adua

A militant leader lies dead after his sect fought the faltering government

Within days of a truce being declared between militants in the Niger Delta and the government, serious fighting broke out in Nigeria's poverty-ridden north (AC Vol 50 No...


Results that are fit to print

This month’s elections will be unique – the ruling class cannot agree on who they want to win

Until now, every Nigerian national election has been more or less managed under an elite pact. The richest and most powerful people informally agree to accept the outcome,...