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Dangote Oil Refinery begins processing gasoline, NNPC to be sole buyer

A view of the newly-commissioned Dangote petroleum refinery is pictured in Ibeju-Lekki, Lagos
A view of the newly-commissioned Dangote petroleum refinery is pictured in Ibeju-Lekki, Lagos, Nigeria May 22, 2023. REUTERS/Temilade Adelaja/File Photo Purchase Licensing Rights, opens new tab
  • Refinery promises to ease Nigeria’s reliance on costly imports
  • Sole fuel importer NNPC Ltd owes billions to traders
  • Gasoline launch follows naphtha, other products
Nigeria’s Dangote Oil Refinery has begun processing gasoline after delays caused by recent crude shortages, an executive said on Monday.
The $20 billion refinery on the outskirts of Lagos, built by Nigerian billionaire Aliko Dangote, began operations in January with output of products including naphtha and jet fuel.
With a capacity of 650,000 barrels per day, Africa’s largest refinery promises to ease oil producer Nigeria’s costly reliance on imported oil products.
“We are testing the product (gasoline) and subsequently it will start flowing into the product tanks,” said Devakumar Edwin, a vice president at Dangote Industries Limited.
He did not say exactly when the gasoline would hit the local market.
Edwin said state-oil firm NNPC Ltd, Nigeria’s sole importer of gasoline, would buy its gasoline exclusively.
“If no one is buying it, we will export it as we have been exporting our aviation jet fuel and diesel,” Edwin said.
The delivery of gasoline into the Nigerian market will ease NNPC’s struggle to supply the local market. The company is reeling with debts of $6 billion to oil traders for supply since January.
This has affected its ability to supply the local market where fuel queues have persisted since July.
Prices have jumped by 45% from the official price of 617 naira ($0.3942) announced after subsidies were removed last year.
“The news that Dangote is processing gasoline couldn’t come at a more crucial time given NNPC’s statement about its difficulties securing imported supply due to financial strain,” said Clementine Wallop, director, sub-Saharan Africa at political risk consultancy Horizon Engage.
She said this “prompts the question of how NNPC will manage purchasing from Dangote, and impresses the need for greater transparency in its finances”.
Nigeria is Africa’s top oil producer yet it imports almost all its fuel due to years of neglect of its national refineries.
($1 = 1,565.0000 naira)

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