NIGERIA · ENERGY
Key Facts
—The claim: Aliko Dangote, Africa’s richest man, says his Lagos oil refinery alone is worth more than $40 billion, before any of his other businesses are counted.
—The gap: Forbes has pegged his fortune near $38 billion, and about $32.8 billion at other points in 2026, while Bloomberg put it at $36.7 billion on 8 June 2026.
—Why trackers struggle: Most of Dangote’s empire, from cement and fertiliser to sugar and the refinery, is privately held, giving outside valuers limited visibility.
—The asset: The 650,000 barrels-per-day refinery near Lagos began operating in early 2024, and Dangote owns about 92.3% of it.
—Export turn: By March 2026 Nigeria had become a net exporter of petroleum products for the first time in decades, driven largely by the refinery.
—The IPO ahead: A pan-African listing for the refinery, previously valued at up to $50 billion, could come as soon as late 2026.
The Dangote refinery valuation is now at the heart of a public dispute over Africa’s biggest fortune: Aliko Dangote says the Lagos plant alone is worth more than $40 billion, well above the roughly $38 billion that Forbes attributes to his entire net worth.
Dangote disputes the wealth trackers
Speaking to the online interview show The School of Hard Knocks, Dangote pushed back when the host referenced Forbes’ estimate of about $38 billion.
“My refinery is worth over $40 billion, just the refinery alone,” he said, adding that a fuller picture of his wealth would emerge in due course.
He attributed the gap to structure rather than modesty. “They said I am worth $38 billion because most of our businesses are not listed yet,” he said.
Why the Dangote refinery valuation is so hard to pin down
The trackers diverge sharply. Forbes’ real-time list has placed Dangote near $32.8 billion at points in 2026, while Bloomberg’s index valued him at $36.7 billion on 8 June 2026, a year-to-date gain of nearly $5 billion.
Much of that rise reflects the refinery. Bloomberg values the plant at roughly $20 billion based on its construction cost, a figure Dangote’s comment suggests is far below what it would fetch in a sale.
His stake is the single largest part of his tracked wealth: about 92.3% of a facility that both Forbes and Bloomberg have had to estimate from the outside.
A bet on energy sovereignty
The refinery’s rise carries a strategic charge. For decades Nigeria, one of Africa’s top crude producers, paradoxically imported most of its fuel, a drain on dollars and a recurring political headache.
By refining at home and exporting the surplus across West Africa, Dangote has turned a national weakness into leverage, the kind of industrial self-reliance many African governments now court.
It is also why his valuation fight resonates far beyond Lagos, since the plant sits at the centre of a wider contest over who builds, owns and finances Africa’s heavy industry.
The refinery reshaping West Africa’s fuel trade
The 650,000 barrels-per-day refinery near Lagos began operating in early 2024 and has scaled quickly. By March 2026, Nigeria had crossed into net petroleum-exporter territory for the first time in decades.
The plant supplied more than 95% of Nigeria’s aviation fuel and, in a single month, shipped 12 cargoes of refined products to Côte d’Ivoire, Cameroon, Tanzania, Ghana and Togo.
It also sent jet fuel to Europe after disruptions to shipping through the Strait of Hormuz, a sign of how quickly the refinery has plugged into global energy flows.
In the same interview, Dangote said he had made around $10 billion in a single quarter; that figure has not been independently corroborated against the refinery’s reported results.
An IPO that will test the number
The refinery is also expanding. Dangote’s group has agreed a $400 million deal with a Chinese machinery maker to roughly double capacity by 2029.
The bigger catalyst is a planned pan-African initial public offering, previously valued at up to $50 billion, that Dangote has indicated could proceed as early as late 2026.
A listing would, for the first time, give the market a transparent, exchange-tested value for the asset, replacing the construction-cost and present-value assumptions the trackers rely on today.
Forbes estimates Dangote added about $4.6 billion in 2026 alone, helped by a 69% jump in Dangote Cement shares since March 2025.
Why it matters beyond one fortune
Dangote’s argument is really about visibility, not vanity. As African champions stay private, the continent’s true corporate value is routinely understated by global tools built around listed markets.
An IPO that prices the refinery near his number would not only reshuffle the world’s wealth rankings; it would also hand Nigeria a marquee listing and a fresh test of investor appetite for African industrial assets.
Asked how he wants to be remembered, Dangote said simply: as the man who industrialised Africa.
Frequently asked questions
How much does Aliko Dangote say his refinery is worth?
He says the Lagos refinery alone is worth more than $40 billion, before any of his other businesses are counted.
What do Forbes and Bloomberg estimate Dangote’s net worth to be?
Forbes has placed it near $38 billion, and about $32.8 billion at other points in 2026, while Bloomberg valued him at $36.7 billion on 8 June 2026.
Why is Dangote’s wealth so hard to value?
Most of his businesses, including the refinery, cement, sugar and fertiliser, are privately held, so outside trackers have limited visibility into their market value.
When could the Dangote refinery IPO happen?
Dangote has indicated the pan-African listing, previously valued at up to $50 billion, could proceed as early as late 2026.
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