Energy Oil

Dangote files new lawsuit against Nigeria over fuel import licences

Photo caption: A flame rises from a gas flare at the Dangote oil refinery and fertilizer plant site in the Ibeju Lekki district of Lagos, Nigeria, March 2, 2026. REUTERS/Sodiq Adelakun/File Photo Purchase Licensing Rights

 

Dangote Petroleum Refinery has filed a new lawsuit against Nigeria’s attorney general in a ​bid to overturn fuel import licences issued to ‌marketers and the NNPC state oil firm, court documents seen by Reuters show.

According to Reuters report, the case signals renewed tensions almost a year after Dangote withdrew an ​earlier lawsuit challenging similar licences. That case sought ​to nullify import permits issued to the Nigerian ⁠National Petroleum Company and several traders.

The new filing asks ​the Federal High Court in Lagos to set aside import ​permits issued or renewed by the Nigerian Midstream and Downstream Petroleum Regulatory Authority (NMDPRA), arguing they breach an earlier order to maintain the ​status quo.

NMDPRA did not immediately respond to a request ​for comment.

Regulators and marketers have previously argued imports are needed to ‌ensure ⁠adequate supply and prevent shortages.

Dangote said in the filing that the licences issued this month undermine its operations and contravene the law, which it argues allows imports only when ​domestic supply ​falls short.

Dangote ⁠ended the earlier lawsuit in July 2025 without explanation, leaving unresolved questions over competition and ​supply in one of Africa’s largest fuel ​markets.

Nigeria ⁠has long relied on petrol imports due to underperforming state refineries. Dangote’s $20 billion facility, with a capacity of 650,000 barrels ⁠per ​day, was billed to end that ​dependence, but imports have continued to cover supply gaps as the refinery ​ramps up output.

 

 

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