The Dangote Group which recently started up its long-awaited 650-Mb/d refinery in southwestern Nigeria, says it ends up having to buy domestic crude from international traders even though it has a supply agreement from state-owned Nigerian National Oil Company (NNPC).

And those purchases are costly. Dangote says it often pays international traders an additional $3-$4 premium per barrel which translates to $3-$4 million per cargo for the same Nigerian crude.

For September, the plant’s requirement is 15 cargoes, of which NNPC has allocated six from local production. Despite appealing to Nigerian Upstream Petroleum Regulatory Commission (NUPRC), Dangote hasn’t been able to secure the remaining volume from domestic supply.

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