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Nigerian House will investigate the dispute between Dangote and regulator over fuel imports and pricing

The Nigerian House of Representatives voted on Tuesday to?investigate a dispute?between the downstream?oil regulator of the country and Dangote?Refinery, over allegations?about arbitrary licenses for fuel imports and petrol price benchmarks. This was in response to corruption allegations against the regulator's head.

Aliko Dangote, Nigeria's richest man, has escalated his fight with the Nigerian ?Midstream and Downstream Petroleum Regulatory Authority (NMDPRA), accusing it of ?allowing in cut-price fuel imports that squeeze local refineries, including his ?650,000-barrel-per-day Lagos plant, Africa's largest.

Dangote wants a formal investigation into the NMDPRA's Farouk Ahmad, citing concerns about governance and claims that he has spent personal money beyond his declared income.

The lawmakers warned that the dispute could lead to a shortage of fuel during the holiday season and that regulatory uncertainty would threaten energy security and investor trust.

The House Petroleum Committees are mandated to report back in four weeks on the resolution of the dispute.

Members claim that the Dangote refinery is a "strategic investment" which could help Nigeria to reduce its dependence on imported fuel, generate much-needed foreign currency, and moderate prices. They claimed that disputes between the regulators and the country's largest domestic refiner could disrupt supply, cause price volatility and lead to policy inconsistencies.

Legislators did not announce hearing dates immediately. Reporting by Camillus Eboh, Writing by Elisha Gbogbo and Editing by Hugh Lawson.

(source: Reuters)