Dangote refinery says it has identified the individuals responsible for promoting the misleading narrative that it imports petrol into Nigeria.
On February 4, David Bird, chief executive officer (CEO) of Dangote refinery, said the refinery is only importing intermediate feedstock, not petroleum products.

In a statement on Monday, the refinery said it will reveal the identities and motives of those spreading the claim at the appropriate time.
“This propaganda is being promoted by unpatriotic and unscrupulous individuals who cannot afford to see Nigeria stop imports ā individuals who helped to milk the NNPC refineries through fraudulent financing transactions for refinery repairs, which ended up being squandered. These individuals will soon have their day in court,ā the statement reads.
Dangote refinery said it issued the clarification in response to recent publications attributed to an international intelligence firm.
The refinery said the reports misrepresent its operations and create a misleading picture of Nigeriaās refining landscape.
The company said it categorically refutes claims, āamplified through certain newspaper adverts on Monday, February 9, 2026, suggesting that it imports finished Premium Motor Spirit (PMS) into the countryā.
According to Dangote refinery, the misinformation was āappropriately addressed during an S&P Global forum held today in the United Kingdomā.
Following the clarification, the plant said the forum āacknowledged the refineryās pivotal roleā in reshaping the global refining landscape.
According to the statement, the refinery does not import petrol into Nigeria and that āit is only pursuing alternative feedstocks to improve its secondary-unit utilisationā.
Dangote refinery described the claims as inaccurate and deceptive, saying that as a merchant refinery operating in line with global best practices, it imports only feedstocks and blending components ā not petrol.
These materials, including high sulphur reformates, low-RON condensates, and high sulphur cracked gasoline, must undergo further processing before they meet regulated market specifications,ā the plant said.
The refinery said this is a standard global practice, especially āamong advanced refining hubs in Europe and Asia, where facilities routinely optimise their crude slates and blending strategies to enhance operational flexibility and marginsā.
Misrepresenting the intermediate streams as āfuelā or āgasoline,ā the company said, distorts public understanding and undermines confidence in Nigeriaās domestic refining progress.
Dangote refinery said the only petrol it supplies to the Nigerian market is its Euro 5 compliant petrol, noting that every batch undergoes meticulous quality checks to ensure Nigerians receive fuel that āranks among the highest quality available globallyā.
Since starting operations, the refinery said it has notably improved the quality of fuels available in the Nigerian market and ended the nationās reliance on low-grade, high-sulphur gasoline historically imported into West Africa.
Dangote refinery called on industry stakeholders to adopt higher levels of technical accuracy, balance, and responsibility in their reporting.