Dangote Petroleum Refinery & Petrochemicals FZE has placed a bold $1 billion private offering on the table as it anchors its ambitions to a $39.1 billion valuation.
The move signals renewed confidence in one of Africa’s most ambitious industrial projects and places fresh pressure on investor appetite for large-scale energy infrastructure in Nigeria.
The company opened the offer on June 1 and closed it on June 10. It priced shares at $0.35, offering three billion ordinary shares to institutional investors.
Vetiva Advisory Services Limited led the transaction, while FirstCap Limited served as joint issuing house. Together, they structured a capital raise that positions the refinery for its next expansion phase.
Investors face strict entry terms. The minimum subscription stands at one million shares, equal to $350,000. Additional purchases must follow in increments of 500,000 shares.
This structure effectively filters participation toward institutional players, family offices, and high-net-worth investors with long-term risk tolerance.
The company also introduced a 365-day lock-up period. This restriction limits early exit options and reinforces a strategy focused on patient capital rather than short-term trading gains.
At the same time, the memorandum confirms that the board may issue additional shares if demand exceeds supply.
As of March 3, 2026, the refinery disclosed involvement in five active legal cases. While details remain limited, the disclosure introduces an additional layer of scrutiny for investors conducting due diligence. It also reflects the complexity of operating one of the world’s largest privately built refineries.
Despite these challenges, the scale of the project remains unmatched. The refinery sits on 2,635 hectares in the Lekki Free Zone outside Lagos.
It carries a design capacity of 650,000 barrels per day, a level that could reshape Nigeria’s dependence on imported refined fuel if fully optimized.
Aliko Dangote has invested more than a decade into building the asset, with total investment estimates exceeding $20 billion.
Over time, the project has moved from skepticism to strategic significance, especially as Nigeria continues to navigate fuel import dependence and foreign exchange pressures.
The current valuation of $39.1 billion positions the refinery as one of the most capital-intensive industrial assets in Africa. It also raises a fundamental question for investors: whether a privately controlled, founder-led energy giant can consistently execute at a scale that has challenged even sovereign-backed projects.
At its core, this private placement is more than a fundraising exercise. It is a confidence test. It asks investors to take a long-term position on Nigeria’s energy future, industrial self-sufficiency, and the execution power of one of Africa’s most influential industrialists.
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