According to trading sources cited by Reuters, the Dangote Petroleum Refinery has released tenders for the sale of two fuel cargoes for export, the first from the recently operational refinery.
The $20bn Dangote refinery, inaugurated in May last year by former President Muhammadu Buhari, has been expected to commence operation but has suffered setbacks which include the inability of Nigeria’ state oil enterprise, NNPCL, to supply it raw crude.
Lingering regulatory approvals had also stalled Dangote Petrochemical Refinery’s plan to release aviation fuel (Jet A1) and diesel for sale in the Nigerian market in January.
Three of the sources told Reuters that the first cargo is 65,000 metric tonnes of low-sulfur straight run fuel oil, which Dangote has awarded to Trafigura and is scheduled to load at the end of February; although, Trafigura, like Dangote, has declined to comment on the report.
Without providing more details, at least one refiner stated that Trafigura had made them an offer for the cargo.
According to three additional sources, the second tender is for roughly 60,000 tonnes of naphtha. They both mentioned that the deadline for submissions is February 15. Details about loading were not immediately accessible.
LSEG and Kpler ship tracking claims Dangote has also bought some US oil. Two million barrels of US WTI Midland are anticipated for delivery in early March.
Constructed on a peninsula near the outskirts of Lagos, the commercial capital of Lagos, the refinery boasts the largest nameplate capacity of any refinery in Africa, having been built by Aliko Dangote, the richest man on the continent.