NIGERIA · ENERGY
Key Facts
—The milestone: Dangote’s Lagos refinery shipped about 466,000 tonnes of jet fuel to Europe in June, overtaking the United States as the region’s top external supplier, per S&P Global Commodity Insights.
—A doubling in one month: June cargoes nearly doubled from the 232,000 tonnes sent in May — the largest monthly Nigerian volume since the country became a net jet fuel exporter in 2024.
—America fades: US jet fuel shipments to Europe slid from a record 818,000 tonnes in April to 560,000 tonnes in May and 399,000 tonnes in June.
—The value: The June cargoes were estimated at US$553 million (₦757 billion), based on a domestic reference price of about ₦1,300 a litre for 582.5 million litres.
—The plant: The Lekki facility is the world’s largest single-train refinery, processing 650,000 barrels of crude a day since being commissioned in 2023.
—What is next: A US$46 billion plan for two more mega-refineries, and a share listing that courts Middle East investors with a minimum ticket of US$350,000.
Dangote jet fuel exports to Europe reached about 466,000 tonnes in June, overtaking the United States as the region’s biggest external supplier for the first time, according to S&P Global Commodity Insights. A Nigerian plant now fuels more of Europe’s aircraft than America does.
How Dangote jet fuel overtook American supply
The June shipments, tracked by S&P Global’s Commodities at Sea service, were the largest monthly volume of Nigerian jet fuel to reach Europe since Nigeria became a net exporter of the product in 2024. They nearly doubled from May, when the Lagos plant sent 232,000 tonnes across.
The American retreat was just as striking. US exports of jet fuel to Europe fell from a record 818,000 tonnes in April to 560,000 tonnes in May and 399,000 tonnes in June, leaving the Nigerian refinery as the continent’s bigger supplier for the month.
A market that swung from scarcity to glut
European jet fuel prices spiked earlier in the year as conflict in the Middle East disrupted supply, driving the Northwest Europe benchmark to a record of roughly US$1,694 a tonne at the end of March. By the end of June the same benchmark had fallen to about US$982 a tonne.
Refiners had delayed maintenance to cash in on the spike, pushing extra fuel into an oversupplied summer market, while shipments from the United Arab Emirates through the Suez Canal resumed. That Dangote expanded its share of European sales even as prices sank points to the scale and low cost of the Lagos operation.
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Global
Jul 8, 2026 · 16:47
Brent crude · benchmark
78.28
+5.56%
L 75.45day rangeH 80.57
+11.59% over 12 months
Market breadth · 15 names
33% advancing
5 ▲ advancing10 declining ▼
Currencies, rates & key inputs
Gold
4,097
-1.16%
Silver
58.93
-3.28%
Copper
6.13
-0.64%
Iron ore
161.91
·
WTI crude
73.80
+4.77%
Full instrument board
Instrument
Last
Change
YoY
Prev.
High
Low
Volume
GOLD
4,097
-1.16%
+23.89%
4,145
4,145
4,033
158,659
SILVER
58.93
-3.28%
+61.58%
60.93
61.46
57.61
46,218
BRENT
78.28
+5.56%
+11.59%
74.16
80.57
75.45
87,708
WTI
73.80
+4.77%
+8.01%
70.44
76.08
71.75
388,340
COPPER
6.13
-0.64%
+8.63%
6.17
6.22
6.06
40,773
LITHIUM
71.93
-2.53%
+81.18%
73.80
72.04
70.60
260,509
IRON ORE
161.91
—
+69.45%
161.91
161.91
1
SOY
1,188
-0.71%
+16.01%
1,197
1,204
1,188
145,751
CORN
454.50
+2.71%
+10.58%
442.50
465.75
454.50
197,661
WHEAT
606.25
-0.49%
+11.65%
609.25
627.00
606.00
68,199
COFFEE
313.60
-5.43%
+9.12%
331.60
325.00
307.30
23,193
SUGAR
15.12
-0.13%
-6.26%
15.14
15.39
15.08
78,646
COCOA
6,039
+6.56%
-31.06%
5,667
6,224
5,807
24,999
ORANGE JUICE
153.15
-5.52%
-39.82%
162.10
158.95
144.05
1,551
COTTON
80.22
+4.26%
+24.03%
76.94
79.67
78.28
27,401
BEEF
237.78
-0.27%
+8.09%
238.43
238.50
234.38
34,576
CATTLE
362.30
+0.46%
+13.53%
360.65
364.10
353.70
12,613
USD/BRL
5.15
-0.26%
-6.24%
5.16
5.18
5.14
—
Largest moves today
COCOA
6,039
+6.56%
BRENT
78.28
+5.56%
ORANGE JUICE
153.15
-5.52%
COFFEE
313.60
-5.43%
WTI
73.80
+4.77%
COTTON
80.22
+4.26%
SILVER
58.93
-3.28%
CORN
454.50
+2.71%
The session read
The Brent crude rose 5.56%, with breadth negative — 5 of 15 names higher. COCOA led, while ORANGE JUICE lagged.
From The Rio Times
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From fuel importer to exporter in two years
Before the plant came on stream, Africa’s largest crude producer imported almost all of its refined products, despite decades of oil exports. The refinery has since turned Nigeria into a net exporter of petrol for the first time in a generation.
Nigeria’s midstream and downstream regulator says the plant shipped about 1.66 billion litres of refined products in April alone — roughly 513 million litres of petrol, 534 million litres of diesel and 615 million litres of aviation fuel. Those flows have eased the pressure that fuel imports long placed on the naira and on foreign reserves.
The estimated US$553 million value of the June jet fuel cargoes reflects a Nigerian domestic reference price of about ₦1,300 a litre, Billionaires.Africa reported, and the fuel would have sold into a weaker European market. The direction of travel, though, is not in dispute.
The bigger bet: two more refineries and a record listing
Aliko Dangote, Africa’s richest man, has long argued that the continent loses value by shipping crude abroad and buying back refined fuel at a premium. The Europe milestone is the strongest evidence yet for the case he has been making, and he is already exporting the model eastward to Tanzania.
His group has outlined a US$46 billion plan for two more mega-refineries linking West and East Africa. The Lagos plant itself is moving toward the stock market, courting Middle East investors with a minimum commitment of US$350,000 in what would rank among the largest listings ever attempted on the Nigerian Exchange.
What to watch next
Analysts expect Nigerian jet fuel to stay competitive in Europe for as long as the price gap between the regions holds, with rival barrels also arriving from Saudi Arabia and India. Traders warn the current glut could reverse if tensions flare again around the Strait of Hormuz or if Middle Eastern refiners recover slowly.
Aviation demand, softer than expected in the peak travel season, adds another layer of uncertainty. Whatever prices do, June marked a structural shift: a West African refinery now sells Europe more jet fuel than the United States — a reordering of the energy map that is central to the new scramble for Africa.
Frequently asked questions
How much jet fuel did the Dangote refinery ship to Europe in June 2026?
About 466,000 tonnes, according to S&P Global Commodity Insights vessel-tracking data — the largest monthly Nigerian volume since the country became a net jet fuel exporter in 2024. That overtook the United States, whose shipments fell to 399,000 tonnes.
Why did the United States lose its position as Europe’s top jet fuel supplier?
US jet fuel exports to Europe slid from a record 818,000 tonnes in April to 560,000 tonnes in May and 399,000 tonnes in June. Dangote nearly doubled its own shipments over the same period.
How big is the Dangote refinery?
It is the world’s largest single-train refinery, able to process 650,000 barrels of crude a day at the Lekki Free Zone outside Lagos. It was commissioned in 2023 and reached full production over the following year.
What does the milestone mean for Nigeria?
Africa’s largest crude producer now exports refined fuel it imported for decades, easing pressure on the naira and on foreign reserves. Dangote has outlined a US$46 billion plan for two more mega-refineries and is preparing a record share listing.
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