Nigeria’s President Muhammadu Buhari will commission the multi-billion-dollar Dangote oil refinery in two weeks, a presidential spokesperson said on Sunday, setting the facility up for its first production since construction began in 2016.
Nigeria, Africa’s largest oil producer, sees the 650,000-barrel-per-day refinery—built by billionaire industrialist Aliko Dangote’s Dangote Group—as a solution to end the country’s reliance on imports for nearly all of its refined petroleum products.
Spokesperson Bashir Ahmad said that Buhari will commission the refinery, near Lagos, on May 22, one week before he is set to leave office after serving the maximum two terms allowed by the constitution.
A spokesperson for Dangote confirmed the commissioning date but did not provide further details.
The cost of the Dangote refinery rose to $19 billion from an initial estimate of between $12 and $14 billion, after years of delays.
Related Posts
-
Luka wa Kahangara: The Chief at the Heart of the Lari Massacre
In the misty highlands of Central Kenya, the early 1950s were years of land hunger,…
-
500 Kenyans Removed from the Wealth List
Five hundred Kenyans were dropped from the exclusive list of dollar millionaires in 2023. This…
-
Beyond Wakanda: The Real Kingdoms That Inspired the Hype
A history-meets-pop-culture look at Mali, Benin, and Lesotho’s regal legacies When Black Panther burst onto cinema…


