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Dangote Refinery At Full Throttle: Otedola Sees Naira Gaining Strength

In February 2026, the Dangote Refinery — Africa’s largest single-train oil refinery — announced it had attained its full designed processing capacity of 650,000 barrels per day (bpd).

This milestone followed extensive optimisation of its Crude Distillation Unit (CDU), and Motor Spirit (MS), production block, enabling a sustained supply of up to 75 million litres of Premium Motor Spirit (PMS) daily to the Nigerian market.

The refinery, based in the Lekki Free Zone in Lagos, marks a historic transformation for Nigeria — a major crude producer that has imported most of its refined petroleum products for decades.

Otedola’s Projection: Naira Below ₦1,000/$

Femi Otedola, chairman of First HoldCo Plc and a prominent Nigerian investor, publicly linked this achievement to a potential strengthening of the naira via a post on his on social media (X).

In his view, the full operation of local refining could:

He stated that with domestic refining now fully underway after decades of import reliance, pressure on the foreign exchange market is expected to reduce significantly — and that the naira could trade below ₦1,000 to $1 by end of 2026, a rate not seen in years.

Otedola’s remarks reflect optimism not just about exchange rates but macroeconomic stability tied to Nigeria’s energy transformation.

Beyond Current Capacity: Expansion Plans

In his statement, Otedola also highlighted that the Dangote Group has already embarked on a major capacity expansion, committing roughly $12 billion to increase refinery throughput to 1.4 million bpd.

The expansion is designed to go beyond traditional fuel outputs by adding petrochemical production lines, including:

Both products are essential industrial inputs — PP for plastics/packaging and LAB for detergent manufacturing — and would reduce Nigeria’s import bill even further.

Otedola stressed that work on this expansion “has already commenced in earnest”.

Why This Matters for the Naira

Nigeria’s foreign exchange system has struggled under the weight of:

The Dangote Refinery’s full capacity output alters this dynamic by replacing imported refined products with locally produced ones. This lowers the demand for dollar outflows tied to imports, thereby alleviating pressure on forex reserves.

Analysts and market participants have long argued that reducing Nigeria’s import dependency for fuel and industrial inputs would support a stronger exchange rate — not just because of fewer dollar outflows, but also from potential inflows via exports of surplus products.

In recent weeks, the naira has already shown modest strengthening, trading around ₦1,350–₦1,440 per dollar across official and parallel markets — its best levels in over two years.

Economic Implications: A Broader Perspective

Otedola’s view — that the naira could strengthen past ₦1,000/$ — should be seen as optimistic but plausible, dependent on several factors:

Reduced Dollars Demand

With less need for fuel imports, Nigeria could conserve foreign reserves and stabilise supply in the FX market.

Industrial Growth

Local petrochemicals production may feed into manufacturing, reducing imports of key raw materials.

Market Sentiment and Policy

Exchange rates are also influenced by monetary and fiscal policies, capital flows, and investor confidence. Strong domestic refining impacts these indirectly through competitiveness and economic resilience.

Risks and Constraints

Full FX impact depends on:

Local distribution challenges could influence pricing and the realised impact on consumption and FX dynamics.

Conclusion: A Turning Point for Nigeria?

The attainment of full capacity by the Dangote Petroleum Refinery represents a pivotal moment for Nigeria’s energy sector and broader economy. According to Femi Otedola’s assessment:

✔ Domestic refining at scale can conserve forex
✔ Reduced fuel imports can strengthen the naira
✔ Industrial and petrochemical expansion adds economic diversification

While the idea that the naira could trade below ₦1,000/$ by the end of 2026 is ambitious, it underscores growing optimism among some investors and stakeholders about Nigeria’s potential to shift away from historical import dependence toward greater self-sufficiency and export strength.

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