Africa’s richest man, Aliko Dangote, is pushing deeper into international capital markets, with his refinery unit now targeting up to $1 billion through a private debt offering directed at foreign investors.
Dangote Petroleum Refinery & Petrochemicals FZE, which operates the largest crude-processing plant on the continent, is structuring the deal as part of a broader financing strategy that also includes a private share placement and a future initial public offering, according to sources familiar with the transaction.
The fundraising push arrives at a strategically advantageous moment. Global energy supply chains have grown increasingly strained due to ongoing geopolitical tensions in the Middle East, driving buyers across Africa and international markets to seek alternative fuel sources, a gap the Dangote refinery has been well-positioned to fill.
The Lagos facility has recorded test output runs of approximately 700,000 barrels per day, surpassing its official nameplate capacity of 650,000 barrels. It currently supplies petrol, diesel, and aviation fuel to Nigeria while exporting to destinations spanning Africa, Europe, the United States, and Saudi Arabia.
The planned debt transaction follows a $750 million private placement completed by Dangote Fertiliser Ltd in April, the group’s debut foray into international debt capital markets. A separate private equity round for the refinery is said to have attracted up to $2 billion in investor interest.
Dangote Industries, which the billionaire leads with an estimated personal net worth of around $36.5 billion, has set an investment target of no less than $40 billion over the next five years. Central to those ambitions is doubling refinery capacity to 1.4 million barrels per day by 2028, a scale that would rank it second only to India’s Jamnagar facility globally.
Beyond refining, the group’s diversification roadmap includes a deep-sea port in Nigeria, expansion of annual fertiliser production to 12 million tonnes by 2030, a liquefied gas venture, and the development of a 20,000-megawatt power generation plant. There are also reports of a potential 650,000-barrel-per-day refinery in East Africa, aimed at reducing the continent’s dependence on imported petroleum products.

Seunmanuel Faleye is a brand and communications strategist. He is a covert writer and an overt creative head. He publishes Apple’s Bite International Magazine.


















