Nigeria Fuel Import Policy Dispute
Analysis based on 18 articles · First reported May 25, 2026 · Last updated May 29, 2026
The dispute between the NNPC and the Dangote Petroleum Refinery over fuel import licenses directly impacts the Nigerian oil and gas market. Increased domestic refining could significantly reduce Nigeria's fuel import bill, saving N15 trillion annually, and generate $11 billion in foreign exchange, positively affecting the Nigeria — Nigerian naira and macroeconomic stability.
Dele Oyewale, Chairman of the Alliance for Economic Research and Ethics LTD/GTE, has strongly advocated for Nigeria to prioritize domestic fuel refining through the Dangote Petroleum Refinery, arguing it can save the nation over N15 trillion annually in fuel import costs and generate $11 billion in foreign exchange. He criticizes the NNPC's continued defense of fuel import licenses, stating it undermines Nigeria's energy self-sufficiency and economic sovereignty. The NNPC has accused the Dangote Petroleum Refinery of attempting to monopolize the fuel market, a claim Oye refutes, asserting that the refinery actually breaks the NNPC's long-standing dominance in importation. Oye emphasizes that Nigeria's legal frameworks, including the Petroleum Industry Act and the Nigerian Oil and Gas Industry Content Development Act, prioritize local refining and that imports should only be a short-term measure. He calls for a review of import licensing, stronger protection for domestic refineries, and greater transparency in refinery rehabilitation projects, citing global models from countries like Brazil, Saudi Arabia, India, and the United States.
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