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Dangote Refinery Exports First Gasoline Cargo To U.S. - Politics - Nairaland

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Dangote Refinery Exports First Gasoline Cargo To U.S. by Islie(op): 8:41am On Sep 03, 2025
I built everything, didn’t inherit my father’s wealth, says Dangote

By : Kingsley Jeremiah, Abuja


The Dangote Refinery has exported its first gasoline cargo to the United States (U.S.). The development, which marks a new milestone for the facility’s growing global footprint, was not immediately confirmed when The Guardian contacted the company’s Group Chief Branding and Communications Officer, Anthony Chiejina .

Argus reported that a Gemini Pearl loaded around 300,000 barrels of gasoline at Dangote’s Port on August 26 for U.S., with a likely discharge at New York or New Jersey, according to trade data from Kpler.

Market participants suggested that a trading firm, Vitol, might have chartered the vessel, although this has also not been confirmed. While this is the first Nigerian gasoline cargo to move to the U.S., Dangote has already shipped products eastwards. In June and July, the refinery exported three LR2 cargoes, two to the Middle East Gulf and one to Singapore.

Traders said the latest shipment appears to be driven by arbitrage opportunities, with U.S. Atlantic Coast gasoline prices rising and inventories falling.

The refinery is, however, still exporting low-sulphur straight-run fuel oil, suggesting its RFCC is operating at around 45-50pc capacity. The unit was shut in August for 10–15 days and has since restarted, but market sources said operational issues persist, including high metals content in the feedstock .

Meanwhile, Aliko Dangote has said that he did not rely on inherited wealth to build his business empire, insisting that everything he owns today was built from scratch.

In an interview originally uploaded by Bloomberg, which resurfaced online yesterday, the billionaire industrialist reflected on his family background, revealing that his late great-grandfather was regarded as the richest man in West Africa in the 1940s, while his grandfather was also among Nigeria’s wealthiest at the time.

“The family’s name is Dantata. That’s from my maternal side,” Dangote said. He added that although his father was “fairly rich” through business and politics, he deliberately chose not to keep any of the wealth passed down to him.

“One thing that I’m very, very proud of is that I did not inherit any money from my father. I built everything from scratch to where I am.

“Whatever I inherited from him, which means in assets, I gave that on to charity since then,” he explained.

Dangote, however, recalled how he began his career working briefly with his uncle before moving to Lagos, where he started buying and selling cement, saying: “It was just a very low-key business. The issue is that when you look at cement, cement is what builds infrastructure, and we need a lot of infrastructure.”
https://guardian.ng/news/dangote-refinery-exports-first-gasoline-cargo-to-u-s/

Re: Dangote Refinery Exports First Gasoline Cargo To U.S. by MaiDeribe:
While Aliko Dangote portrays himself as a self-made industrial titan, there is a compelling case to argue that he is, in fact, a full-fledged NEPO baby, leveraging inherited privilege and entrenched social networks to accelerate his rise:

1. Family Wealth and Influence
• Dangote’s maternal family, the Dantatas, were among West Africa’s wealthiest dynasties in the 1940s–1960s. Wealth here is not just financial, it’s social capital, political connections, and elite networks, all of which are invaluable in business.
• His paternal family also held wealth and influence, giving him access to elite education, mentorship, and exposure to high-stakes business early on.


2. Access to Capital and Networks
• Starting a cement trading business requires seed capital, banking trust, and industry connections. While Dangote claims he started small, the ease of accessing credit, suppliers, and contracts in Lagos is highly unlikely for someone without elite backing.
• Nepotistic leverage manifests subtly: his uncle provided initial guidance and a foothold in Lagos commerce, something most aspiring entrepreneurs never get.


3. Structural Advantage in Infrastructure & Government Contracts
• Dangote’s empire thrived in sectors historically dominated by politically connected elites, like cement, sugar, and oil.
• His success was facilitated by regulatory and government environments favoring those with insider knowledge and access. Ordinary entrepreneurs face significant barriers in these markets.


4. Branding as Self-Made While Benefiting from Legacy
• Public messaging frames Dangote as building from scratch, but cherry-picking “working with an uncle” while downplaying inherited social, educational, and network advantages is a classic NEPO narrative.
• True self-made billionaires rarely have direct family dynastic connections that shield them from systemic risks in emerging markets.



Congrats building it from the scratch, show some more empathy and sanitize your trucking system, too many Nigerians are dying for your profit. Lets aim for more dollars and also show mercy and pity. Nobody will be buried with a single dollar. We are all leaving it in this world. Whether millions or billions or trillions.

Re: Dangote Refinery Exports First Gasoline Cargo To U.S. by puremaker7(m): 9:00am On Sep 03, 2025
Congratulations, Hardworking and inspiring....kundus
Re: Dangote Refinery Exports First Gasoline Cargo To U.S. by Nonso92(m): 9:00am On Sep 03, 2025
Congratulations, Hardworking and inspiring....kundus
Re: Dangote Refinery Exports First Gasoline Cargo To U.S. by nairalanda1(m): 9:01am On Sep 03, 2025
And he also went to school

For the attention of all those school na scam people
Re: Dangote Refinery Exports First Gasoline Cargo To U.S. by tony0806: 9:01am On Sep 03, 2025
From now, steady inflow of dollar is guaranteed for Dangote.


Abeg, who be this kundus??😡
Little wonder Suen introduced a bot to wipe them out
Re: Dangote Refinery Exports First Gasoline Cargo To U.S. by Goalnaldo(m): 9:03am On Sep 03, 2025
Lies!! You may not use the wealth but what about the influence? Nepo baby 🐥🍼
Re: Dangote Refinery Exports First Gasoline Cargo To U.S. by zoedew: 9:04am On Sep 03, 2025
Islie:
I built everything, didn’t inherit my father’s wealth, says Dangote



https://guardian.ng/news/dangote-refinery-exports-first-gasoline-cargo-to-u-s/
Salutary! Folks have a lot positive to learn from Dangote as a person, corporation and business entity. It has turned out to be a melting point of sorts where you can find folks from everywhere in the world employed to deliver good to humanity in return for billions of dollars for the founder Aliko Dangote.
Re: Dangote Refinery Exports First Gasoline Cargo To U.S. by citygarden(m): 9:04am On Sep 03, 2025
And this is the refinery some people like David, Obi special adviser with Obigos said can't function for the next 30 years. Congratulations to Dangote and Tinubu Lagos.
Re: Dangote Refinery Exports First Gasoline Cargo To U.S. by tunde1200(m): 9:04am On Sep 03, 2025
This is a great news
Congratulations to Nigeria and Yoruba land.
God bless all the lovers of this country Amin.
Haters from hating.....,
Re: Dangote Refinery Exports First Gasoline Cargo To U.S. by tunde1200(m): 9:05am On Sep 03, 2025
citygarden:
And this is the refinery some people like David, Obi special adviser with Obigos said can't function for the next 30 years. Congratulations to Dangote and Tinubu Lagos.
Hmmm 🤔
They're pained Tinubu is performing gradually.
Re: Dangote Refinery Exports First Gasoline Cargo To U.S. by Dogalmighty17:
Yes. He didn't inherit his father's wealth. That's true. Because his father's wealth was peanuts.On the other hand, wealth from his mother's side was humongous. His great-great grandfather on his mother's side was one of the richest Africans at the time. His maternal grand father was wealthy enough that First Bank as we currently know it was opened primarily because of him. He was the banks first depositor.

To say Dangote started from the scratch would be disingenuous. His uncle gave him a huge amount of money to start with. Money that is equivalent of over 15 million naira now. But here's what his uncle gave him that was worth far more than money. Guarantees, contacts and a name that opens doors anywhere across the African continent.
Re: Dangote Refinery Exports First Gasoline Cargo To U.S. by jaxxy(m): 9:06am On Sep 03, 2025
NNPCL doesn't rate dangote fuel but US rate Dangote fuel. Carry go sir!
Re: Dangote Refinery Exports First Gasoline Cargo To U.S. by Adakintroy: 9:15am On Sep 03, 2025
But Nigeria we mumu sha. Is it that there were no business mind all this while that could have seen this or there was too much corruption? Imagine the opportunity we were missing out on since.

Better late than never Sha. Kudos to dangote. No fuel shortage for a long time now. All the yanga for fuel station done end. Now them de rush you to their pump as soon as you enter any station
Re: Dangote Refinery Exports First Gasoline Cargo To U.S. by Softmirror: 9:17am On Sep 03, 2025
MaiDeribe:
While Aliko Dangote portrays himself as a self-made industrial titan, there is a compelling case to argue that he is, in fact, a full-fledged NEPO baby, leveraging inherited privilege and entrenched social networks to accelerate his rise:

1. Family Wealth and Influence
• Dangote’s maternal family, the Dantatas, were among West Africa’s wealthiest dynasties in the 1940s–1960s. Wealth here is not just financial, it’s social capital, political connections, and elite networks, all of which are invaluable in business.
• His paternal family also held wealth and influence, giving him access to elite education, mentorship, and exposure to high-stakes business early on.


2. Access to Capital and Networks
• Starting a cement trading business requires seed capital, banking trust, and industry connections. While Dangote claims he started small, the ease of accessing credit, suppliers, and contracts in Lagos is highly unlikely for someone without elite backing.
• Nepotistic leverage manifests subtly: his uncle provided initial guidance and a foothold in Lagos commerce, something most aspiring entrepreneurs never get.


3. Structural Advantage in Infrastructure & Government Contracts
• Dangote’s empire thrived in sectors historically dominated by politically connected elites, like cement, sugar, and oil.
• His success was facilitated by regulatory and government environments favoring those with insider knowledge and access. Ordinary entrepreneurs face significant barriers in these markets.


4. Branding as Self-Made While Benefiting from Legacy
• Public messaging frames Dangote as building from scratch, but cherry-picking “working with an uncle” while downplaying inherited social, educational, and network advantages is a classic NEPO narrative.
• True self-made billionaires rarely have direct family dynastic connections that shield them from systemic risks in emerging markets.



Congrats building it from the scratch, show some more empathy and sanitize your trucking system, too many Nigerians are dying for your profit.
Malali you better focus on your life. Your efforts can't change Dangote's destiny.
Re: Dangote Refinery Exports First Gasoline Cargo To U.S. by Adebaba1(m): 9:17am On Sep 03, 2025
this is a big feat
congratulations to the dangote group
Re: Dangote Refinery Exports First Gasoline Cargo To U.S. by Segzy19: 9:18am On Sep 03, 2025
If Dangote fuel quality can be worthy of being exported to the US, then NNPCL was thrashtalking when they complained about Dangote's petrol quality.

Anyway, more Forex inflow for the country.
May we keep getting it right
Re: Dangote Refinery Exports First Gasoline Cargo To U.S. by PHIPEX(m): 9:19am On Sep 03, 2025
But NNPC told us Dangote fuel is not good for us, what has changed?

Bunch of Africans killing African businesses for selfish gain
Re: Dangote Refinery Exports First Gasoline Cargo To U.S. by WorldRichest: 9:20am On Sep 03, 2025
Shame on US, they can’t even refine oyel for their use. Dangote and JAGABAN are saving their ass
Re: Dangote Refinery Exports First Gasoline Cargo To U.S. by MaiDeribe: 9:21am On Sep 03, 2025
Softmirror:
Malali you better focus on your life. Your efforts can't change Dangote's destiny.

Are we removing subsidy on saying the truth in Nigeria ?

We should just let people lie and get away with it ?

LMAO
Re: Dangote Refinery Exports First Gasoline Cargo To U.S. by Antoeni(m): 9:21am On Sep 03, 2025
August 13th, at the heart of Benin, the hapless accident happened. Ruth Otabor, a mother of two, who had graduated from the Auchi polytechnic six days earlier, fell to tragic fate.

A truck belonging to the Dangote Cement PLC crushed her at a spot where she engaged a bike man in an altercation, and she suffered fatal harm that tortured her till her death, on August 31st.

Before the anxious public gathered at the scene, the driver had fled and remained at large.

A sympathetic few from the crowd helped Daniel, Ruth’s acclaimed husband and father of one of her children, to rush the unconscious Ruth to the hospital, where she was admitted for immediate care.

Typical of social media trends, the news caught steam in quick minutes and spread at savage speed.

Although Ruth was known, especially in Auchi Poly, where she schooled, two big names built the clout that quickly consumed the saga - Phyna, Ex-BBNaija winner and Dangote, Africa’s Richest Man.

Auchi Polytechnic and its environs erupted in perfervid outrage. But their rage merely smouldered until VeryDarkMan (VDM) visited the location and lit the flame.

As is his style, picking self-soothing truths from a single lens and seizing the stage for self-glorification, VDM pulled the angry Auchi Polytechnic students and youths into his crass clout-show, blocking the federal road against vehicular movement.

He left Auchi an accidental, altruistic hero, ending an episode of the distressing drama.

Dangote Cement PLC, owners of the truck, and the employees of the irresponsible driver, had sent a team from their Risk Assessment Unit to visit Ruth at the hospital and assess the damage.

At the hospital, they met Daniel and the victim’s family and pledged to cater to Ruth’s medical and well-being, in its entirety. Their presence, though secret, was assuring. Both parties cooperated for immediate takeoff.

First, they footed Ruth’s medical bills at Auchi, provided a Land Ambulance to transport her to Benin, where she remained in intensive care.

Second, they transported her to the Lagoon Hospital, in Lagos state, a more standard, specialist hospital, for intensive care, to regain consciousness and stability.

At this juncture, Phyna took charge of the process, shutting off Daniel and other family members, and solely interfacing with Dangote PLC, for reasons I can’t assure.

Dangote Cement PLC gave her a N5 million instant cash gift to travel to Benin to see Ruth before she was airlifted to the Lagoon Hospital. The company catered to the entire expense incurred in airlifting Ruth to Lagos, too.

What is surprisingly striking is that Dangote Cement PLC management, apart from the two-piece statements they released, stayed silent and treaded secretly in the entire process.
Although, I would learn, much later, that it was the company’s internal decision, which stemmed from their ethical protocol of not disclosing interventions they give victims of risks.

A few days later, Phyna held a meeting with Dangote Cement PLC. It was a long meeting, which ended with bargains that soothed both parties.

Dangote’s team reassured their readiness to foot Ruth’s bills, including her leg amputation, and flying her to India for advanced medical care, when her doctors, at Lagoon hospital certify.

But in an abrupt, stunning turn of events, Phyna, perhaps to get Dangote Cement PLC to commit legally to the agreements, engaged her lawyers, without prior notice, and sent a list of demands with items tripled. Not just a few of them were outrageous and insensitive.

Part of her demands included that Dangote Cement PLC must pay her family $90m (over ₦138bn), in the event of suboptimal occurrence (that is, if Ruth dies).

An unconditional ₦10bn payment for permanent disability to Ruth, upkeep of her children & family impact. Another ₦6m monthly allowance for life, reviewed every 2 years in line with USD.

These demands sparked a strong curiosity in me and I wondered, why is Phyna making bargains over her sister’s death, while she breathed? Was it that she knew Ruth wouldn’t survive? Why did she shut off Ruth’s husband and other family members from the process?

And, very importantly, why was she more concerned about getting Dangote Cement PLC to commit to monetary rewards over her sister’s survival and health?

Interestingly, I learnt that, in an initial agreement, Phyna requested Dangote Cement PLC not to involve lawyers, but she later did.

Also, she asked the company not to engage the social media or post details about the incidents, but she regularly shared updates on social media. One may assume, she did for clout and public pity.

In the entire process, one can best fault Dangote Cement PLC’s naivety, especially the seeming nonchalance of the management to engage the public periodically. Their bureaucratic fault has caused the company to face the attack it received in the entire process.

Why so, their silence on or delayed responses to critical issues often leave the public with misinformation and stir misguided reactions.

For instance, the Omega Fire Ministry incident, alleged to have been caused by the company’s truck was a rumoured lie. Pastor Suleiman apologized to them but didn’t make it public.

Also, Dangote Cement PLC needs to show a serious commitment to engaging with the public about their transportation system, particularly their driver recruitment processes, training, and sanctions for erring drivers. A documentary on this wouldn’t be a bad idea.

We hope not to have another Ruth incident, at least in the near future

Re: Dangote Refinery Exports First Gasoline Cargo To U.S. by WorldRichest: 9:21am On Sep 03, 2025
MaiDeribe:

Are we removing subsidy on saying the truth in Nigeria ?

We should just let people lie and get away with it ?

LMAO
Go and concentrate on your life and build your own refinery
Re: Dangote Refinery Exports First Gasoline Cargo To U.S. by AntiChristian: 9:23am On Sep 03, 2025
Dangote to the world!

May Allah bless Dangote!

May Allah bless BAT!

May Allah bless me and all those who wish me well!
Re: Dangote Refinery Exports First Gasoline Cargo To U.S. by MaiDeribe: 9:24am On Sep 03, 2025
WorldRichest:
Go and concentrate on your life and build your own refinery
You think i dont have a refinery ?
Why are you leaving your life to worry about mine ?
Re: Dangote Refinery Exports First Gasoline Cargo To U.S. by itumafriday(m): 9:25am On Sep 03, 2025
This should help and bring the price of dollar down
Re: Dangote Refinery Exports First Gasoline Cargo To U.S. by Silasworld(m): 9:32am On Sep 03, 2025
This is a testament that what the white can do, the black can also do or even better
Re: Dangote Refinery Exports First Gasoline Cargo To U.S. by Kollyk11(m): 9:34am On Sep 03, 2025
And all the truck in Nigeria are here at the dangote truck parking waiting to be loaded without hope of when they will load.nigeria is in a mess
Re: Dangote Refinery Exports First Gasoline Cargo To U.S. by FineUsername(m): 9:42am On Sep 03, 2025
Omo, na corruption oooo, if no be PMB regime sef, i doubt whether dem for allow PIB fly and this refinery for no even exist.
Adakintroy:
But Nigeria we mumu sha. Is it that there were no business mind all this while that could have seen this or there was too much corruption? Imagine the opportunity we were missing out on since.

Better late than never Sha. Kudos to dangote. No fuel shortage for a long time now. All the yanga for fuel station done end. Now them de rush you to their pump as soon as you enter any station
Re: Dangote Refinery Exports First Gasoline Cargo To U.S. by TheBizGenius: 9:56am On Sep 03, 2025
Softmirror:
Malali you better focus on your life. Your efforts can't change Dangote's destiny.
That guy's comment really disappointed me.

This is like saying Solomon, in the Bible, should not be regarded as wise because he was born by David who was already the king.

Everyone has gotten his own story to write. Whatever your background, it's about finishing at a place where you can say to yourself, "I did the best I could, based on the resources life gave me".

And that's what we celebrate Aliko for.

Again, I am just disappointed that anyone can break down someone else's success into fragments to belittle it.

Yuck!!
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