Dangote Refinery News: Africa’s richest man, Aliko Dangote, has reportedly turned down attempts by the Nigerian National Petroleum Company Limited (NNPCL) to increase its stake in the multi-billion-dollar Dangote Petroleum Refinery, even as the industrial giant quietly prepares for what could become one of the biggest stock market listings in African history.
The development comes amid fresh revelations that Dangote is targeting a staggering $50 billion valuation for the refinery business ahead of a planned Initial Public Offering (IPO), a move already sending shockwaves across Nigeria’s financial and oil sectors.
ENigeria Newspaper reports that NNPCL had proposed to increase its existing 7.25 percent ownership stake in the Lagos-based Dangote Refinery project. However, Dangote reportedly rejected the proposal as part of broader plans to eventually open ownership of the refinery to a wider pool of Nigerian and international investors through a public listing.
The decision is already generating intense conversations within Nigeria’s energy sector, especially given the strategic importance of the 650,000-barrels-per-day refinery, which has rapidly transformed the country’s fuel supply landscape.
Energy experts say the rejection signals Dangote’s determination to maintain tighter control over the refinery’s future direction ahead of the anticipated IPO process.
The refinery, valued at approximately $20 billion during construction, has become one of the most ambitious industrial projects ever undertaken in Africa. Since commencing operations, it has significantly reduced Nigeria’s dependence on imported refined petroleum products while also positioning itself as a growing exporter of aviation fuel, diesel, and petrol across Africa and beyond.
ENigeria Newspaper reports that Dangote now plans to sell up to 10 percent of the refinery business to outside investors, potentially raising around $5 billion if the targeted valuation is achieved.
If this pulls through, the deal could become one of the largest capital market transactions in Nigerian history and potentially reshape investor confidence in Africa’s industrial sector.
The development also comes at a time when Dangote appears to be expanding his continental ambitions aggressively.
Just days earlier, reports emerged that the billionaire businessman was considering building another massive refinery project in East Africa, with Kenya’s Mombasa increasingly favored as the preferred location. The proposed refinery is estimated to cost between $15 billion and $17 billion.
Dangote reportedly cited Kenya’s stronger fuel consumption market and deeper seaport infrastructure as major reasons behind the preference for Mombasa over Tanzania’s Tanga port.
Meanwhile, Dangote Refinery IPO discussions are fueling renewed debate over the future relationship between Dangote Refinery and NNPCL under the leadership of Bayo Ojulari who was appointed by President Bola Ahmed Tinubu in April 2025 following a restructuring of the NNPC board.
The NNPC currently owns 7.25 percent stake in Dangote Refinery, which is roughly $1 billion it injected into the project years ago. Under earlier arrangements, NNPCL had reportedly explored increasing its stake to 20 percent before negotiations eventually changed.
However, Dangote’s latest position suggests the billionaire entrepreneur may now prefer a broader shareholder structure rather than allowing further concentration of ownership in government hands.
Energy analysts say the move could also be interpreted as a strategic attempt to strengthen investor confidence ahead of the IPO by positioning the refinery as a more commercially independent entity.
“This is bigger than a simple ownership disagreement,” one Lagos-based energy analyst told ENigeria Newspaper.
“Dangote understands that global investors typically prefer clearer corporate independence and broader shareholder participation before committing billions into a listing of this magnitude.”
The refinery itself has continued posting massive operational milestones.
Recent industry data indicated that the facility supplied petroleum products worth trillions of naira into the domestic Nigerian market within the first quarter of 2026 alone.
The plant has also intensified exports across several African countries, further strengthening Dangote’s position as one of the continent’s most influential industrialists.
For Nigeria, the Dangote Refinery remains both an economic symbol and a politically sensitive asset.
The project has repeatedly dominated national conversations around fuel pricing, energy security, crude supply allocations, and the future of local refining.
The relationship between Dangote Refinery and NNPCL have also experienced occasional tension in recent months, including disputes over crude cargo allocations and fuel supply dynamics.
Still, the planned IPO could mark an entirely new phase for the refinery business.
Oluranti Opeoluwa, a petroleum Industry experts told ENigeria Newspaper that “a successful public offering at a $50 billion valuation would instantly rank the Dangote Refinery among Africa’s most valuable privately built industrial assets while potentially attracting billions in fresh investment capital”.
“It could also deepen Dangote’s already enormous influence within Africa’s energy and financial markets” he says.
For now, neither Dangote Group nor NNPCL has publicly disclosed full details of the now controversial discussions surrounding the rejected stake increase proposal.
But one thing is becoming increasingly clear: Aliko Dangote appears determined to chart an independent path for the Dangote Refinery, and possibly create Africa’s next mega publicly traded energy empire in the process.













