Brief Energy

Dangote Feedstock Brief

ELDR Intelligence · Energy

Large-scale refining capacity in Nigeria has shifted a long-standing question from theoretical to operational: can a refinery of this scale source enough domestic crude reliably, or does it remain structurally dependent on imported feedstock priced and shipped on international terms?

The Dangote Refinery's emergence as one of the largest single-train refining complexes globally has made this a live structural issue for Nigerian energy policy, not just a commercial question for the refinery's own operations. The dynamics are worth understanding in general terms for any institution with downstream exposure to West African energy markets.

The Structural Tension

Domestic crude allocation policy, naira-denominated settlement mechanisms, and the logistics of moving crude from production fields to a coastal refining complex all interact in ways that determine whether a refinery of this scale can actually run primarily on domestic feedstock, or whether it ends up — at least for a meaningful share of throughput — sourcing from the international market despite operating in one of the world's significant crude-producing countries.

Why It Matters Beyond Nigeria

The outcome has implications well beyond one refinery's margins. Domestic refining capacity at this scale changes Nigeria's import/export balance for refined products, affects regional fuel pricing across West Africa, and shifts foreign exchange dynamics depending on how much feedstock and output settle in naira versus dollars. Institutions with exposure to Nigerian energy, logistics, or downstream distribution should track feedstock-sourcing patterns as a leading indicator of broader policy and currency dynamics, not just a refinery-specific operational detail.

The Takeaway

Feedstock sourcing for large-scale African refining capacity is a structural policy question with currency and trade-balance implications well beyond the refinery gate. ELDR Intelligence tracks this as part of our broader West African energy coverage.

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Public Policy ELDR Brief

The Obi–Kwankwaso Question

May 2026 · ELDR Intelligence · 7 min read · PDF ↓

The political commentary around a possible Labour Party–NNPP alliance ahead of 2027 has consistently confused aspiration with architecture. Peter Obi and Rabiu Kwankwaso share a structural interest in breaking the APC–PDP duopoly. What they do not share is a theory of how to govern together, a compatible support base geography, or a credible mechanism for negotiating a joint presidential ticket without one of them accepting a subordinate role he has consistently rejected.

What the Alliance Would Require

A functional Obi–Kwankwaso coalition would require resolution of three structural problems that neither camp has publicly addressed. First, the presidential slot: both men ran in 2023 and neither conceded. A joint ticket requires one of them to accept the vice-presidential position — and the political logic of 2027 has not changed in ways that would make either capitulation rational.

Second, geographic complementarity does not equal coalition viability. Kwankwaso's Kano machine and Obi's South-East base are geographically complementary but electorally insufficient without sustained penetration of the South-West, the Niger Delta, and the Middle Belt — all of which require either significant defections from APC/PDP structures or independent organising capacity that neither party currently possesses.

Third, the LP's 2023 performance masked serious organisational deficits. The Obidient movement was a voter mobilisation phenomenon, not a party-building exercise. Between 2023 and 2027, LP has not demonstrably resolved its structural weaknesses at state and local government levels.

What Kwankwaso Gets — and Gives Up

For Kwankwaso, the alliance logic is defensive as much as offensive. NNPP performed well in Kano in 2023 but faces a challenging 2027 environment given the APC's subsequent consolidation of Kano State governance after the tribunal rulings. An alliance with LP preserves national relevance and provides a platform for Kwankwaso's ongoing positioning as a power broker.

What he gives up is the possibility of running as a presidential candidate on his own terms — which, at his age and given the trajectory of Nigerian politics, likely means he gives it up permanently. That calculus is unlikely to produce agreement unless the terms for him are extraordinary.

The APC Calculus

The APC's 2027 strategy does not require stopping an Obi–Kwankwaso coalition. It requires fragmenting the opposition sufficiently that no single candidate or alliance reaches the constitutional threshold. The 25% rule — requiring a winning candidate to obtain at least 25% of the vote in at least two-thirds of Nigeria's states — favours incumbents with national organisational infrastructure. APC has it. The opposition individually does not.

The Obi–Kwankwaso coalition conversation is real as political posturing. As electoral architecture, it remains unbuilt — and the window for building it is narrower than commentators suggest.

ELDR Assessment

ELDR assigns a 25% probability to a formal LP–NNPP joint ticket before the 2027 primaries season opens. The more likely scenarios are continued informal coordination without structural merger (45%), or a complete breakdown of alliance talks as each party's internal pressure to run independently reasserts itself (30%). Institutions should plan for a competitive three-to-four-way first-round contest with significant regional variation in outcomes.

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