Dangote to build Africa’s largest detergent raw material plant as refinery reaches full capacity

Africa’s richest industrialist, Aliko Dangote, has announced plans to construct the continent’s largest Linear Alkyl Benzene production facility within the sprawling Dangote Refinery complex, marking a significant expansion of Nigeria’s petrochemical ambitions.

The new plant will produce 400,000 tonnes of Linear Alkyl Benzene annually, positioning Nigeria to potentially meet the entire African demand for the key detergent feedstock. Linear Alkyl Benzene, commonly referred to as LAB, is a critical raw material used in the manufacture of surfactants, the active cleaning agents found in soaps and detergents. It is not a finished consumer product but a foundational industrial input for detergent manufacturers.

Dangote disclosed the plan during a tour of the refinery with Bayo Ojulari, Group Chief Executive Officer of the Nigerian National Petroleum Company Limited. According to Dangote, the facility is expected to be completed within 30 months.

Aliko Dangote

He noted that Africa currently has only two LAB plants, one in Algeria with a capacity of 100,000 tonnes and another in Egypt producing 50,000 tonnes annually. The proposed 400,000 tonne output in Nigeria would significantly exceed existing continental capacity and could eliminate the need for large scale imports of the product.

The development comes as the $20 billion Dangote Refinery, widely described as Africa’s largest single train refinery, moves toward stabilising full capacity fuel production. With refining operations advancing, Dangote is repositioning the site from a traditional refinery into a broader industrial hub hosting multiple petrochemical and manufacturing operations.

Industry analysts say the LAB project signals a strategic shift from basic refining to deeper value chain integration. By producing key petrochemical inputs locally, Nigeria could reduce foreign exchange pressure tied to imports while strengthening domestic manufacturing capacity.

Africa’s detergent manufacturers have historically relied on imported LAB from Europe, the Middle East and Asia due to limited local production. A large scale domestic supply could lower production costs, encourage new entrants into the sector and stimulate downstream industrial growth.

The refinery complex already includes petrochemical components and is integrated with other Dangote Group operations spanning fertiliser, cement, agriculture and industrial manufacturing. The addition of a high capacity LAB plant further embeds the conglomerate within Africa’s industrial supply chains.

For Nigeria, the project aligns with broader policy goals of import substitution, industrialisation and economic diversification away from crude oil exports. Expanding petrochemical production enhances the country’s ability to capture more value from its hydrocarbon resources rather than exporting raw materials.

Dangote to build Africa’s largest detergent raw material plant as refinery reaches full capacity

However, the project’s success will depend on sustained operational stability, infrastructure support and competitive pricing relative to global suppliers. While the proposed output exceeds current African capacity, demand growth, regional trade frameworks and logistics efficiency will shape its market impact.

If completed on schedule, the plant would represent one of the largest single investments in Africa’s detergent raw material sector and could position Nigeria as a dominant supplier of LAB across the continent.

Dangote Refinery reaches 650,000 barrels-per-day capacity

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