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    Chronicle NG

    Dangote refinery delayed until end of 2020

    Chronicle EditorBy Chronicle EditorAugust 9, 2019No Comments3 Mins Read
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    * Nigerian billionaire’s refinery delayed by logistics
    * Trading desk in Lagos will have 30 staff
    * Tanks, completed this year, could serve as fuel depot
    * Fertiliser plant to start this year

    Aliko Dangote, President of Dangote Group
    Aliko Dangote, President of Dangote Group

    Africa’s largest oil refinery will not be finished until the end of 2020 due to problems importing steel and other equipment, executives at Dangote, which is building the facility in the Nigerian commercial hub of Lagos, told Reuters.

    Nigeria, Africa’s most populous nation, imports virtually all its fuel due to sclerotic and underutilised refineries, and even the state oil company is looking to the 650,000 barrel per day (bpd) Dangote refinery to help address this.

    Price caps force NNPC to import nearly all its gasoline at a significant cost and periodic fuel shortages are common.

    Despite the delays at the congested Apapa and Tin Can Island ports in Lagos, a Dangote executive said the company could start using the refinery’s tank farms as a depot to warm up operations.

    “We will be able to complete the (refinery) project by the end of next year – mechanical completion,” said Dangote Group Executive Director Devakumar Edwin, who oversees the project.

    The company expects fuel production within two months of completion of the refinery, which could transform Africa’s biggest crude producer from a fuel importer into a net exporter, upending global trade patterns.

    Billionaire Aliko Dangote, who built his fortune on cement, first announced a smaller refinery in 2013, to be finished in 2016. Dangote then moved the site to Lekki, in Lagos, upgraded the size and said production would start in early 2020.

    Industry sources told Reuters last year that fuel output was unlikely before 2022.

    TRADING PLAN

    Edwin also said during an interview at his office in Lagos that Dangote is setting up its own trading desk, with a senior team of three people and a staff of roughly 30 who will monitor international commodity prices.

    READ: Naira closes at N359.3 to dollar

    “We are setting up a complete trading desk here with us. In the next three months the full desk will be set up,” he said.

    Giuseppe Surace, the refinery’s chief operations officer, said the refinery’s tank farms will be finished this year and could be used as a warm-up for operations.

    The tanks will be connected to five “single point mooring buoys” (SPMs), which will allow the refinery complex to pump crude straight into tanks from large ships at sea and pump products back out onto boats of any size.

    The SPMs will be the primary method of supplying oil products from the refinery, Surace said, adding that the team were considering using the tanks as training or as a depot before the refinery’s production starts.

    “We might do that. We will be ready to do that,” he said, though he added that no decision had been taken yet.

    The team is in talks with NNPC, two other international oil companies and two large oil traders, all of whom are interested in supplying crude and buying products, Edwin said.

    Edwin said the crude unit for the refinery, which set sail from China last month, would arrive by the end of October.

    The trains at a fertilizer plant on the same site will start up by the end of this year, the executives said.

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    Police IG vows justice for victims of Plateau massacre

    Police nab 42 miners over abduction of Kwara monarch

    April 20, 2026
    Police IG vows justice for victims of Plateau massacre

    Police confirm kidnap of UTME candidates, others by pirates in Calabar

    April 20, 2026
    NYSC warns corps members against night travel as 2026 Batch A orientation dates and safety guidelines are announced.

    NYSC issues call-up letters for 2026 Batch ‘A’ Stream II

    April 20, 2026
    Retired Nigeria Police Force men and their families blocked a gate at the Presidential Villa in Abuja on Monday to protest their continued inclusion in the Contributory Pension Scheme (CPS). The demonstrators, led by the Police Retired Officers Forum of Nigeria (PROF), branded the program as "fraudulent, illegal, inhumane, and obnoxious" and urged President Bola Ahmed Tinubu to sign the Police Exit Bill. According to the retirees, if signed into law, the bill, which was passed by the National Assembly on December 4, 2025, and transmitted to the president on March 16, 2026, would remove police personnel from the CPS. The National Coordinator of PROF, CSP Raphael Irowainu (retd.), led the protest and stated that the goal was to get the president to act on the legislation. “Our major aim here is to prevail on President Bola Ahmed Tinubu to sign our bill—the bill exiting the police from the Contributory Pension Scheme—passed by the National Assembly on 4th December 2025 and transmitted to him on 16th March 2026 into law, nothing more than that,” he said. Ads by Irowainu bemoaned that while other security agencies have been removed from the scheme, police personnel remain included. “The soldiers have been exited, the SSS has been exited, the Air Force has been exited, the Navy has been exited, and the National Intelligence Agency has been exited. The police, who are the father of them all, are trapped in this obnoxious Contributory Pension Scheme,” he added. The pensioners maintained that the CPS had a negative impact on their wellbeing, calling it a "slavery and untimely death-inducing pension scheme." Monday's demonstration is not the first time retired police officers have raised the issue. In July 2025, retirees held a similar demonstration at the National Assembly, seeking their expulsion from the plan. Some demonstrators, many of whom were elderly, also protested at the Force Headquarters in Abuja, expressing their dissatisfaction with the CPS's pension arrangements. The latest protest reflects rising frustration among retired police officers with pension reforms and their exclusion from benefits provided to other security organizations.

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    Boko Haram displays kidnapped victims in Borno

    Boko Haram threatens FG, issues 72-hour ultimatum over 416 captives

    April 20, 2026
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