Nigeria’s Dangote refinery has sustained near-nameplate operations in 2026, with crude imports hitting approximately 630 kbd in April and 609 kbd month-to-date in May, product exports reaching record monthly volumes, and a diversified feedstock strategy replacing US Midland barrels with opportunistic regional and transatlantic grades.
On Dangote’s crude supply side, WTI Midland, which averaged over 200 kbd through February and March, dropped out of Dangote’s feedstock slate entirely by April. Midland had previously served as the refinery’s primary alternative to domestic supply, 83% of non-domestic barrels in 2025. However, the Atlantic Basin arbitrage shifted materially following disruptions linked to the Strait of Hormuz blockade, with elevated freight, insurance, and voyage costs eroding the economics of U.S. barrels into Lekki.
Dangote Crude Imports split by Origin Country

In April, Dangote approximately doubled its monthly cargo receipt cadence, with domestic Nigerian grades up +262 kbd to 605 kbd. This trend has sustained into May with 552 kbd of domestic crude intake month-to-date.
Alongside the domestic ramp, Dangote has pursued an active diversification of its feedstock book, chasing other available barrels to sustain run rates:
Operationally, Dangote has been running at an average of 600 kbd in April and May following the successful optimisation of key secondary units earlier this year. The refinery is currently operating in simultaneous max-gasoline and max-jet modes, lifting gasoline yields and boosting jet output. This has positioned Dangote as an increasingly important marginal supplier of gasoline and jet fuel into Atlantic Basin markets, while effectively turning Nigeria into a net gasoline exporter.
Overall, Dangote refined product exports hit an all-time high of 341 kbd in April, accounting for just above half of the refinery's total outputs during the month. In May to date, export volumes have fallen to average just below 250 kbd.
Dangote Refinery monthly exports by product (May-to-date)

Amidst a globally tight supply environment, the refinery's higher-value slates saw substantial international distribution:
Since May began, Straight Run Fuel Oil (SRFO) cargoes leaving the refinery have sharply increased, climbing to above 80 kbd compared to the 38 kbd recorded in April.
Equally visible in May is a clear strategic prioritization of the domestic market. Loadings destined for Nigeria to date have averaged an all-time high above 250 kbd. Within this domestic allocation, gasoline and diesel account for just above 50% and 30% of the total volume, respectively.
Dangote Refinery monthly waterborne domestic deliveries by product

Proprietary Data Spotlight: While Dangote's total international export footprint eased to 250 kbd in May due to secondary unit constraints, its domestic pipeline evacuation has hit unprecedented levels. The refinery's ability to maintain high baseline runs at 600–650 kbd continues to anchor West African product balances.
