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NNPCL Targets 20% Stake In Dangote Refinery

The Nigerian National Petroleum Company Limited (NNPCL) announced on Tuesday its intention to increase its equity stake in the $20 billion Dangote Petroleum Refinery to 20%. This move is aimed at bolstering Nigeria’s domestic refining capacity and solidifying NNPCL’s presence in the downstream oil sector.

The Group Chief Executive Officer of NNPCL, Bayo Ojulari, made the disclosure while speaking at the Abu Dhabi International Petroleum Exhibition and Conference 2025. 

Ojulari said the move aligns with NNPCL’s long-term strategy to deepen local participation in the energy value chain and ensure energy security.

‘The company is working towards increasing its stake in Nigeria’s Dangote refinery to 20 per cent’, Ojulari said as reported by Reuters.

His remarks come just weeks after the President of the Dangote Group, Aliko Dangote, revealed plans to list between five and 10 per cent of the refinery’s shares on the Nigerian Exchange within the next year, mirroring the public listing model of its cement and sugar subsidiaries.

‘Within the next year, the refining business will list five per cent to 10 per cent of its shares on the Nigerian stock exchange’, he said, mirroring a playbook established by the group’s cement and sugar businesses. We don’t want to keep more than 65 per cent to 70 per cent’, Dangote said, explaining that shares will be offered incrementally subject to investor appetite and market depth.

‘I want to demonstrate what this refinery can do, then we can sit down and talk’, Dangote said. This move would represent a fresh investment of almost 13 per cent above its current 7.2 per cent stake.

The announcement also comes on the heels of NNPCL’s ongoing search for technical and equity partners to revive its three dormant state-owned refineries in Port Harcourt, Warri, and Kaduna. Despite years of rehabilitation funding, the refineries have remained idle, forcing the country to rely heavily on imported petroleum products.

It is believed that if the Dangote refinery reaches full operational capacity and NNPCL completes its refinery rehabilitation programme, Nigeria could finally achieve self-sufficiency in refined petroleum products, a goal that has eluded Africa’s biggest crude producer for decades.

Ojulari further noted that the state-owned oil company had made significant progress in enhancing transparency across its operations as it prepares for its much-anticipated initial public offering.

‘The IPO journey is by law. The Petroleum Industry Act prescribes that NNPCL must move towards becoming a publicly listed company. It’s not an option for us’, the NNPCL boss noted. ‘Since May this year, we have started publishing our monthly performance reports, and that has continued as part of our efforts to build public trust and accountability’.

With the company’s IPO plans still in view, Ojulari said NNPC was positioning itself as a globally competitive energy company driven by efficiency, transparency, and profitability. ‘We are building an institution that Nigerians can be proud of, one that is commercially driven, transparent, and ready to compete globally’, he said.

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