*To pay dividends to shareholders in dollars after listing
*To invest $40b over five years to scale operations across refining, fertiliser production and mining ventures in Africa
WorldStage– The Dangote Group has confirmed the appointment of Stanbic IBTC Capital Ltd., Vetiva Advisory Services Ltd. and FirstCap Ltd. as advisers for the proposed Pan-African Initial Public Offering (IPO) of a 10 per cent stake in its $20 billion, 650,000-barrel-per-day refinery in 2026.
Alhaji Aliko Dangote who was quoted as saying this during an event organised by the Atlantic Council in Washington DC said that the share sale would support long-term investments and deepen African capital market participation.
According to him, Dangote Petroleum Refinery and Petrochemicals FZE will pay dividends to shareholders in dollars after listing, although specific financial details of the planned offering were not disclosed.
He said that the share sale aligns with his broader strategy to invest about 40 billion dollars over five years to scale operations across refining, fertiliser production and mining ventures in Africa.
Dangote said that the expansion plan includes quadrupling fertiliser output, increasing refinery capacity significantly, and establishing potash and phosphate plants in the Democratic Republic of Congo alongside copper refining projects in Zambia.
He said that 650,000 barrels-per-day refinery, Africa’s largest refinery recently reached full operational capacity, coinciding with supply disruptions linked to tensions in the Middle East, which boosted demand for its petroleum products globally.
Dangote said that the facility has also emerged as a strategic supplier of jet fuel to Europe, reinforcing its growing relevance in international energy markets and enhancing Nigeria’s position in global refining and export chains.
Also speaking, the senior vice president of refining, chemicals and oil markets at consultancy Wood Mackenzie, Alan Gelder, said that the refinery was highly profitable.
He said that the rising export volumes and strong demand fundamentals across multiple product segments.
Gelder said that data indicated that diesel exports rose to about 79,500 barrels per day in April from 73,600 in March, while gasoline shipments declined to 50,100 barrels per day from nearly 102,400 previously.

































































