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Nigeria prioritizes local gasoline supply and suspends import licenses

Nigeria has suspended the issuance?of gasoline import 'licences' for the second consecutive month, as regulators?begin enforcing the provisions of the Petroleum Industry Act PIA that only allows?imports if the African countrys domestic supply is?insufficient.

The Crude Oil Refineries Association of Nigeria has confirmed that no import licences have been issued yet in March. This indicates a shift in the focus to local production.

This'shift' highlights the stronger intention of the Nigerian authorities to safeguard domestic refining. It is also a victory for the Dangote Refinery which sued last year the regulator and state oil company to stop imports.

The PIA allows imports only when domestic production is insufficient to meet the national demand.

The previous'regulator', who resigned last year, claimed that issuing licenses was essential to maintain competition and avoid market dominance.

Fuel prices are up more than 54% in the last week since Israel and the U.S. began their strikes against Iran. This has pushed global oil markets to higher levels. NMDPRA spokesperson George Ene Ita blamed the sharp increase in?prices to the escalating conflict between Israel and the United States in the Middle East.

Nigeria's average daily gasoline consumption dropped to 56.9 millions litres from 60.2million litres a day in January 2026.

The 'Dangote Refinery' supplied the local market with?36.5 millions litres (about 8 million litres) of petrol in February. The regulator decided that 'these volumes are sufficient and withheld the import licences.

Eche Idoko is the spokesperson for the Crude Oil Refiners Association of Nigeria. CORAN has been urging the government to stop granting import licences which are reducing the margins of local refiners.

"We support any measure that helps protect local production." Idoko stated that the challenge is now to maintain momentum. (Reporting and editing by Alexander Smith; Isaac Anyaogu)

(source: Reuters)