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The Monexus
Vol. I · No. 165
Sunday, 14 June 2026
Saturday Ed.
Updated 09:47 UTC
  • UTC09:47
  • EDT05:47
  • GMT10:47
  • CET11:47
  • JST18:47
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← The MonexusAfrica

Nigeria's Aviation Fuel Squeeze: Dangote's Export Pivot Leaves Airlines Grounded

Nigeria's $20bn Dangote refinery is exporting jet fuel at record margins while domestic airlines — its own customers — face supply shortfalls that have pushed several carriers toward grounding flights.

Nigeria's $20bn Dangote refinery is exporting jet fuel at record margins while domestic airlines — its own customers — face supply shortfalls that have pushed several carriers toward grounding flights. TechCabal / Photography

Nigeria's aviation sector is facing its most acute fuel supply crisis in years, and the culprit sits less than 200 kilometres up the coast. The Dangote refinery — a $20bn integrated petrochemical complex outside Lagos — is exporting jet fuel to international buyers at margins that are, by industry benchmarks, exceptional. Domestic carriers that rely on the same facility for supply have in recent weeks threatened to stop flying altogether. The standoff has exposed a fundamental tension in Africa's drive toward energy sovereignty.

The conflict comes down to a pricing and allocation question. Dangote, which began commercial operations in early 2024 and has quickly become West Africa's single largest refinery, produces jet fuel well in excess of what Nigerian airlines currently consume. International buyers — particularly in Europe and Asia — are paying more, and exporting at scale is commercially rational. Domestic airlines, many of which operate on thin margins, say the volumes Dangote allocates to the local market are insufficient and the prices charged are above what they can sustain. Several carriers have publicly warned they may ground flights if the situation does not improve. The Nigerian Civil Aviation Authority has been drawn into the dispute, with officials holding meetings in Abuja to explore whether regulatory intervention can force a more favorable allocation to domestic customers.

What complicates the picture is that Dangote is not operating illegally. Export optimization is standard practice for any refinery with access to international markets. The refinery is within its rights to sell to the highest bidder. What the episode reveals, however, is the limits of a development model that builds refining capacity without binding supply commitments to the domestic market. Nigeria, until Dangote came online, was a significant importer of refined fuels — a condition that imposed its own costs on airlines and broader economic activity. Now that a domestic refinery exists, the question of who it serves first has become genuinely contested.

The stakes for Nigerian aviation are immediate and severe. Fuel accounts for a substantial portion of airline operating costs, and any supply disruption ripples through ticket pricing, route viability, and passenger confidence. Airlines are already contending with a naira that has weakened sharply against the dollar, compressing revenue when costs are contracted in foreign currency. A fuel shortage — or a supply at above-market domestic rates — adds another layer of pressure on an industry that has yet to fully recover from the COVID-era downturn. The carriers' threat to ground operations is not, industry analysts note, a negotiating tactic. Several smaller operators are genuinely facing liquidity constraints that could make suspension a financial necessity rather than a bargaining position.

Dangote has indicated that it can meet domestic demand if the pricing dispute is resolved. The refinery has publicly stated it has capacity to supply Nigerian airlines without disrupting export volumes — provided that local buyers accept rates that reflect current international market conditions. The company has not proposed a formal pricing mechanism for domestic allocation and has resisted suggestions that it should be subject to regulated domestic supply obligations. For its part, the Nigerian government is in a delicate position. State intervention to force lower prices risks deterring the foreign investment the country needs to sustain its energy infrastructure buildout. But inaction risks grounding an aviation sector that connects a geographically dispersed country and contributes meaningfully to Nigeria's broader economic activity.

What the episode ultimately underscores is the structural gap that remains between capacity and security. Dangote has delivered something significant: Nigeria now refines a substantial portion of its own crude. But the refinery's commercial logic runs toward the international market — and that creates exposure for the downstream industries, like aviation, that were supposed to benefit from energy sovereignty. Abuja faces a choice between letting market forces resolve the allocation question — with the risk of domestic disruption — or creating a framework that ties large-scale refining capacity to domestic supply guarantees. Neither path is cost-free. The resolution of this dispute will shape how Nigeria manages the next wave of industrial infrastructure projects, where the interests of global investors and domestic consumers most directly collide.

Wire provenance

This editorial synthesis draws on the following public wire/social posts:

  • http://reut.rs/4cTlppf
  • https://x.com/reuters/status/1903245721389170892
© 2026 Monexus Media · reported from the wire