Tuesday, July 7, 2026

Dangote to fund proposed Kenya refinery with cash, bonds and an IPO

By Isaac Anyaogu, LAGOS Nigeria 

Nigeria's Dangote Group plans to finance a proposed 700,000-barrel-per-day oil refinery in Kenya through internal cash flow, bonds ​and an initial public offering, a senior company executive disclosed.

The refinery, East Africa's largest refining project, is expected to take up to three years to build and would supply refined petroleum products to Kenya and ​neighbouring countries, helping to reduce East Africa's dependence on imported fuels.

It ​would also fulfil Dangote's ambition to expand fuel-processing capacity ⁠across Africa following the start-up of its 650,000-barrel-per-day refinery in Lagos.

"The site ​has been selected, soil tests are under way, and design and engineering ​work has commenced. 

Kenya was the choice from the beginning," Edwin Devakumar, Dangote Industries' vice president for oil and gas, told our reporter.

The refinery, which would be built ​on the island of Lamu, off the coast of Kenya, would ​mark Dangote Group's biggest refining investment outside Nigeria. 

Devakumar said the refinery would be financed ‌through ⁠a mix of internally generated cash, bonds and proceeds from a planned initial public offering. 

He did not disclose the project's exact cost, but said it would be comparable to that of the Lagos refinery.

Built ​by Aliko Dangote, ​ranked as Africa's ⁠richest man by Forbes, the Lagos refinery had cost more than $20 billion by the time it began ​operating in 2024.

The initial estimate had been about $9 billion ​in 2013, ⁠but the cost was driven up by a site relocation, engineering challenges, currency weakness, the COVID-19 pandemic and global inflation.

Dangote has for months expressed ⁠interest ​in building a major refinery in East ​Africa. 

The company previously considered Tanzania's port city of Tanga before switching to Kenya, citing ​infrastructure, logistics and market considerations.

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