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Nigeria's Dangote Refinery Announces Layoffs and Cites Acts of Sabotage

Nigeria's Dangote Refinery Announces Layoffs and Cites Acts of Sabotage

The Dangote oil refining company in Nigeria said that it fired a few workers on Friday, citing sabotage at various units. This sparked criticism from the oil workers union who claimed over 800 Nigerians were terminated.

PENGASSAN (the Petroleum and Natural Gas Senior Staff Association of Nigeria) said that the workers had been unfairly dismissed and replaced by over 2,000 Indians.

Africa's biggest refinery with a crude processing capacity of 650 000 barrels a day has created a swing supplier within the Atlantic Basin that could reshape the global fuel trade.

This exercise is not random. The refinery stated that it was necessary to protect the refinery against repeated acts of sabotage which have raised safety concerns as well as affected operational efficiency.

The company did not confirm the number of workers who had been laid off or whether this would have an impact on production. It said that more than 3,000 Nigerians continue to work at the plant.

The recipient of the letter was informed that they had been fired on the evening of September 25.

An official from PENGASSAN stated that staff were terminated because they had joined a union.

Lumumba Okugbawa is the secretary general of PENGASSAN. He said: "This is totally unacceptable and we condemn it completely."

In a statement issued by the refinery, the company said it adheres to internationally recognized labour principles, including the right for every worker to decide freely whether to join or not.

Dangote closed its gasoline unit at the end of August to undergo repairs that will take between 2-3 months.

According to Kpler, a shipping data firm, the plant began processing crude oil in January 2024 and exported more fuel oil in September.

When there is an interruption or maintenance, modern oil refineries tend to export more fuel oil. (Reporting and Additional Reporting By Owolabi Tife, Alex Lawler and David Goodely; Editing by Jason Neely, David Goodely and Alex Lawler)

(source: Reuters)