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The Monexus
Vol. I · No. 165
Sunday, 14 June 2026
Saturday Ed.
Updated 08:49 UTC
  • UTC08:49
  • EDT04:49
  • GMT09:49
  • CET10:49
  • JST17:49
  • HKT16:49
← The MonexusOpinion

Dangote's Jet Fuel Export Strategy Puts Nigeria's Aviation Sector in a Strait

Africa's largest refinery is earning record margins on jet fuel exports while domestic airlines warn of shutdowns. The gap between Nigeria's hydrocarbon wealth and its domestic energy sovereignty has rarely been wider.

@tasnimnews_en · Telegram

Aliko Dangote's refinery is making extraordinary margins on jet fuel, and it is choosing to sell that fuel elsewhere. Nigeria's airlines, squeezed by surging kerosene prices, are threatening to ground flights. The two facts are connected, and the connection says something uncomfortable about where Nigeria's energy priorities actually lie.

Nigeria is Africa's largest crude oil producer and holds the continent's biggest proven reserves. It has run fuel shortages for years — a paradox so entrenched it stopped generating surprise. But the Dangote refinery, commissioned in 2024 and billed as the answer to that paradox, now presents a new version of the same problem: product is available, margins are high, but the domestic market comes second to the export price.

The Export Calculus

The economics are straightforward and not particular to Dangote. Jet fuel — technically aviation turbine fuel — commands a higher price on the international market than it fetches domestically, particularly when the naira has weakened against the dollar and the cost of dollar-denominated crude feedstock rises faster than local selling prices. A refinery optimised for margins will export when the export netback exceeds the domestic netback. That is rational behaviour for any commercial entity.

Dangote's management has framed its export sales as a function of demand signals, not political choice. The refinery, they have noted, is not a public utility. But the moment a single facility handles the lion's share of Nigeria's refined product processing — as Dangote does for jet fuel — its commercial decisions become de facto energy policy. There is no structural separation between Dangote's trading desk and Nigeria's energy security.

What Domestic Airlines Are Facing

Airlines operating inside Nigeria — including carriers that serve routes between Lagos, Abuja, and secondary cities — have warned publicly that jet fuel costs have reached levels that threaten operational continuity. Several have said the cost per litre of aviation fuel now represents a larger share of ticket revenue than at any point in the last decade. The threat to halt flights is not rhetorical; it reflects balance sheets under genuine pressure.

The domestic aviation sector is not a niche concern. Nigeria's airline network connects a country of 220 million people across infrastructure that, for many routes, has no road alternative. Grounding flights disrupts business travel, medical referrals, and the movement of goods across a geographically large federation. The downstream effects of an airline shutdown would fall hardest on people least able to absorb the cost of alternatives.

The Structural Problem Nigeria Has Not Solved

The deeper issue is that Nigeria has not resolved the contradiction between being a hydrocarbon exporter and being energy-secure domestically. The country exports crude, imports refined products, and now runs a refinery that also exports — not because domestic demand is satisfied, but because the export price is better. This is not unique to Dangote. It is a pattern embedded in decades of energy governance, where the dollar value of exports has consistently outweighed the naira value of domestic supply.

Refineries in other major producing states — Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, the UAE — operate under arrangements where domestic product availability is a commercial and political priority, not a residual. Nigeria lacks that arrangement. Dangote is being asked, implicitly, to absorb a public-interest obligation that no formal regulatory framework imposes on it. That gap is a policy failure, not primarily a corporate one.

Sovereignty and the Price of Fuel

There is a version of this argument that reaches further than airline economics. A country that cannot guarantee jet fuel supply to its own airlines is a country whose air connectivity is contingent on commodity price movements set in Amsterdam and Singapore. That is a sovereignty question, not merely a commercial one. It becomes more acute as Nigeria's ambitions in regional connectivity — the Single African Air Transport Market, the push for Lagos to function as a sub-Saharan hub — require exactly the kind of reliable, price-stable fuel supply that the current arrangement cannot provide.

The Dangote refinery is an engineering achievement. It is also, in this specific configuration, a mechanism for converting Nigerian crude into foreign currency while leaving Nigerian airlines exposed. Whether that configuration changes depends on whether anyone in Lagos or Abuja treats it as a problem worth solving — not just for Dangote's shareholders, but for the airlines, the passengers, and the country's claim to energy autonomy.

This publication notes that while Reuters framed the story primarily through the airline cost crisis, the structural question of Nigeria's refining policy and its export-first logic received less prominent treatment in the wire copy.

Wire provenance

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

  • https://x.com/reuters/status/1916324067829928098
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© 2026 Monexus Media · reported from the wire