Dangote Refinery and Petrochemicals shipped about 300,000 metric tons (MT) of Premium Motor Spirit, also known as petrol, to private depot operators and marketers in May.
According to loading programme data by Petroleumprice.ng, roughly 277,000 MT of petrol was allocated to independent marketers and depot operators during the review period, underscoring the refinery’s growing role in Nigeria’s domestic fuel distribution ecosystem.
The shipments were distributed among several downstream players, including Rainoil, Aiteo, AA Rano, Pivot, Bovas Oil and Integrated Oil, with the majority of cargoes destined for Lagos, Africa’s most populous nation’s largest fuel consumption and distribution hub.
Further analysis of the loading programme shows that Rainoil emerged as the largest identifiable beneficiary of petrol supplies during the period. Combined volumes allocated to Rainoil, including its joint cargo with Aiteo, amounted to 107,000 MT, representing more than one-third of all volumes supplied to private marketers.
The data highlights Lagos’ continued dominance in Nigeria’s fuel logistics network. Of the identified cargoes, all but one were designated for discharge in the megacity. The only exception was a 37,000 MT cargo allocated to Rainoil and destined for Warri, reflecting ongoing supply movements to other key consumption centres.
The volume of petrol supplied to private marketers during the month is significant. At approximately 277,000 MT, the cargoes translate to millions of litres of petrol entering the domestic distribution chain.
The scale of the shipments reflects the refinery’s increasing role in supporting product availability across the country at a time when market participants continue to adjust to a deregulated downstream environment.
The loading pattern also highlights the diversity of the refinery’s customer base. Rather than supplying a single dominant marketer, the refinery allocated products across multiple buyers, including major independent marketers and depot operators.
Industry analysts say this broad participation could contribute to improved product accessibility and greater competition within the market. According to them, shipping roughly 390 million litres of petrol to private depots acts as a massive boost to energy security, effectively ending historical fuel scarcity for Nigerians.
For a country that has endured years of long fuel queues in filling stations, the Dangote Refinery is closing a fuel supply gap that has been a major challenge across the country.
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