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Nigeria's Dangote refining plant halts the sale of naira fuel due to crude supply shortages

According to a memo sent to customers by the company, Nigeria's Dangote Refinery has stopped selling petrol locally in naira, citing an unsustainable volume that exceeded its crude allotments.

The suspension, which takes effect on September 28, could complicate attempts to reduce dollar demand in Africa’s largest economy where fuel imports are a long-standing strain on foreign reserves.

The company stated in a memo that "Dangote Petroleum Refinery & Petrochemicals have been selling petroleum products over our Naira Crude allocations, and as a result, we will not be able to sustain PMS in Naira moving forward."

The refinery was selling petrol on the domestic market in naira under an agreement with the Nigerian National Petroleum Company to swap crude for naira. The government initially welcomed the initiative as a means to support the naira and reduce the dollar pressure.

Dangote’s increasing exports, including fuel oil, naphtha and diesel to Europe and West Africa, as well as the United States, have raised concerns about domestic priorities.

The memo advised customers with pending transactions in naira to request refunds in writing.

The refinery didn't immediately respond to our request for comment.

Sources familiar with the situation say that Dangote had just laid off a number of Nigerian employees.

Nigeria struggles to reduce inflation, which is above 20%. It also tries to stabilize a currency that has been weakened by the dollar shortages as well as subsidy reforms. Analysts believe that the decision to stop naira sale could force more marketers to purchase petrol in dollars and further pressure the naira.

The 650,000-barrels-per-day refinery, Africa's largest, was expected to transform Nigeria's fuel landscape. Its domestic obligations and its export ambitions have now been questioned. Ben Ezeamalu, Emelia Sithole Matarise and Ben Ezeamalu are responsible for reporting and writing.

(source: Reuters)