Lagos, Nigeria – Aliko Dangote is doubling down on his industrial empire with two colossal infrastructure projects that could redefine Nigeria’s economic landscape. Fresh details reveal the African billionaire’s plan to build West Africa’s deepest seaport while constructing an unprecedented gas pipeline network from the Niger Delta to Lagos.
The Olokola Mega-Port Blueprint
Location: Ogun State (100km from Dangote Refinery)
Specs: 18m depth to accommodate supertankers
Capacity: 5M TEUs annually (vs Lekki Port’s 2.7M)
Strategic Advantage: Direct integration with Dangote’s:
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650,000 bpd refinery
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3M tonne fertilizer plant
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Future LNG export terminal
“This isn’t just about my businesses—it’s about creating infrastructure that lifts all of Africa’s trade,” Dangote told Bloomberg.
The Gas Revolution Pipeline
Route: Niger Delta → Lagos (1000km+)
Capacity: 3B cubic feet/day (doubling NLNG’s output)
Energy Impact: Could power 6M Nigerian homes
Industrial Fuel: Critical for refinery/petrochemical ops
VP Devakumar Edwin revealed: *”We’ve identified stranded gas fields that can feed this pipeline for 50+ years.”*
Why This Changes Everything
Export Domination: Combined urea/LNG shipments could hit $12B/year
Job Tsunami: 250,000 direct/indirect jobs projected
Trade Rebalance: Cuts Nigeria’s reliance on Chinese-built Lekki Port
The $30B Vision
2025 Target: Group revenue matching Kenya’s GDP
Global Ambitions: World’s top urea exporter by 2028
Vertical Integration: From gas wells to global shipping lanes
Controversies & Challenges
Environmental Concerns: Delta communities fear ecosystem damage
Monopoly Fears: Dangote controls 60% of Nigeria’s industrial gas
Security Risks: Pipeline vulnerable to Niger Delta unrest
“We’re not repeating past mistakes—this will be Africa’s most eco-conscious energy corridor,” assured Edwin.
By the Numbers:
• $4.2B estimated port construction cost
• 18-month timeline for first berth completion
• 40% projected reduction in export logistics costs