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DANGOTE: If We Knew The Magnitude Of What We Were Going Into, We Would Have . . - Business - Nairaland

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DANGOTE: If We Knew The Magnitude Of What We Were Going Into, We Would Have . . by ogododo: 8:17am On Jul 20
Speaks on the construction of a refinery Nigeria banks on for economic revival, his frustrations, achievements, expectations

•It’s like swimming in the middle of the sea, getting tired but making efforts to swim out lest you drown


By Onochie Anibeze

Three places have been etched as outstanding experiences for me over my years as a journalist.

One was in St. Peter’s Basilica and some ancient churches I visited in Rome while touring Europe with the Eagles in preparation for the USA ’94 World Cup finals.

The Basilica is 452 feet high. Its dome is the highest in the world. As tall as it is, the church sits on the tomb of St. Peter, one of the apostles of Jesus Christ. But the wonder to me is the use and the design of marble and tiles up to the last foot. There were no cranes when that church was built. How workers were able to brave the physical challenges to construct such an architectural masterpiece is a striking question.

The second place of wonder to me is in Egypt, the Pyramids. Everybody knows about the Pyramids but note this. The height of each pyramid (there are about seven of them) is about 139 metres and the average weight of a stone used in building them is 2.5 tons. The largest granite stones weigh 25 to 80 tons each. Now the wonder. These pyramids are in the desert. They were built between 2700 B.C. And 1500 B.C.

How did they move those large stones to the desert? How did they mount them one after the other to that height at the time when there were no cranes? You need to visit the Pyramids to appreciate why it is one of the wonders of the world.

Interestingly, a third wonder that I have just seen is not far from where I work in Lagos, Nigeria. It is the Dangote Petroleum Refinery at Ibeju Lekki in Lagos.

President of the Dangote Group, Alhaji Aliko Dangote led a large team of media and businessmen on a tour of the refinery last Sunday. A lot has been written and said about the engineering marvel. President of the Guild of Editors, Eze Anaba simply described it as ‘monstrous’.

I don’t know how to start capturing our tour last Sunday. But you may understand better when told that a tour we started at about 7.30 am ended at about 7 pm. It was a visit to the wonderland they say is seven times the size of Victoria Island. It covers an area of approximately 2,635 hectares.

It has a total storage capacity of 4.5 billion litres which can cover 20 days of crude requirement. The refinery has a 435 MW power plant that can meet the total power requirement of Oyo, Ogun Osun, Kwara, and Ekiti States. It is huge. It is massive. It is monstrous, as Eze put it. And in the words of Arise News Ojy Okpe, the elegant one Dr. Ruben Abati introduces as Ojynika Orjyyyy Okpeeeee, “It’s Dangote Planet”.

From one section to another, we rode on buses. At a time, I had the chance to ride in the same bus with Dangote himself and Devakumar Edwin, the Group Executive Director, Strategy, Portfolio Development and Capital Projects.

There were about seven other buses. It was amazing how Dangote mastered the refinery and explained the technicalities and functions of many sections. Did he witness every construction? From the hangars or quays where crude oil can be evacuated into pipelines leading to the refinery and where refined oil can be discharged into ships, we then drove to the main refinery.

We saw different plants, Petrochemical complexes, Nitrogen plants, Hydrogen generating plants, Raw Water Treatment Plant etc. We drove past more than 80 storage facilities some more than the size of football pitches. Some could store 60m gasoline products. Inside the Dangote Industries Free Zone, there are 10,000 housing units for staff. Workers are up to 30,000. We visited the fertilizer plant and its storage facility. There’s a lab for fertilizer and another huge one for petroleum products.

The refinery is built to refine any type of crude. There are control rooms. Everything about the Dangote Refinery is extraordinary. When I got close to him I asked “must a refinery be this big?”

He smiled and said “It’s the biggest in the world, it’s the first of its kind.” There were other posers from colleagues. Were there times he regretted going into this and even thought of throwing in the towel? What lessons came his way while constructing this? He was at home with every question on the bus ride and during the question and answer time after the tour.

We possibly could have had a second thought if we knew the magnitude of what we were going into. Yes, maybe we wouldn’t have started if we knew” he said. Many saw him. Could he have stopped? Were there frustrations that made him think of quitting?

Yes, there were frustrations but it’s like when you are swimming and you’re in the middle of the sea what do you do when you’re getting tired? You have no option but to continue and swim out.”

The first frustration was finding out that a great part of the land they bought had to be sand-filled as the place was marshy. They spent hundreds of billions doing that. The next was from the indigenes who challenged any action on the land because of their shrines in the place. More compensation would have to be paid to appease the gods. There were many more. Dangote had to build a port as moving crude from the Apapa port was going to be a herculean job. Was that part of the original plan? Many other things came up as construction went on. And for the lessons, experiences, and challenges he encountered, Dangote plans to write a book. “I plan to write a book on project implementation in Africa,” he said.

They started construction of about 31 units of the refinery simultaneously. That was hectic and perhaps one of the things he could have done differently.

In Africa especially in Nigeria, you construct the roads leading to your projects, you provide your own water, security and many other things that are responsibilities of the government. But he was determined to surge on. It is always in his character to top the chart of any business venture he goes into. “We have so many things that deserve places in the Gunness Book of Records here,” he said, adding “soon we will invite them for a tour of this place to see for themselves.”

The Dangote Refinery will go public in the first quarter of 2025, he hinted. Production of fertilizer and some other items are on. The refinery is expected to start producing petrol in August. The visit to the Dangote Refinery was revealing, and mind-blowing to many. To me, it is one of the wonders of our journey as a country. It is a project Nigeria should be proud of and one government should pull all strings to ensure it benefits the people.

For better understanding of magnitude of what we have at the refinery, read 25 FACTS ABOUT DANGOTE REFINERY below. But before then, some words from Aliko Dangote may interest you.

“Our new petroleum refinery is coming with many benefits”

The Dangote Petroleum Refinery Project is amongst our many initiatives towards supporting the transformation agenda of the federal Government. The Government is focused on turning Nigeria into a manufacturing hub, by adding value to our natural resources through processing and refining.

Our goal is to produce within Nigeria most of the goods that were usually imported despite having abundant resources for domestic manufacturing of the same goods. Our investment in cement manufacturing has made Nigeria self-sufficient, thereby transforming us from an import-dependent to cement exporting nation. We commissioned Dangote Fertilizer Plant in March 2022. With the nation now self-sufficient in the production of fertilizer, the surplus is going for the export market thereby generating crucial foreign exchange earnings for the country.

We conceived Dangote Petroleum Refinery & Petrochemicals as an answer to the perennial shortage of premium motor spirit (PMS) in the country. The completion of the project is another milestone for us at Dangote Industries Limited. It is the largest single-train refinery in the world with 650,000 barrels per day refining capacity. It marks the attainment of self-sufficiency in domestic refining of petroleum products and provides excess capacity in refined products, which will now go for the export market.

The refinery is designed to maximize gasoline production, which will account for 53 per cent of the production capacity, compared to most of the refineries in the world which produce between 20 to 25 per cent gasoline. The petroleum refinery can meet 100 per cent of the requirements of Nigeria, of all the liquid fuel products – Gasoline (PMS), Diesel (AGO), Kerosene ( DPK) and Aviation Jet Fuel (JET A-1)

Our new petroleum refinery is coming with many benefits. Refined petroleum is the main source of energy in the transport and powering of machines. The byproducts are also the basic materials of many diverse products as plastics, pharmaceuticals, solvents, fertilizers, pesticides, and clothing.
Our strategy of producing local goods that were hitherto imported creates jobs in the domestic economy instead of providing jobs in developed economies, the source of the imported goods. With the coming onstream of this refinery, thousands of direct and indirect jobs are already being generated from the activities and operations connected to the project. These jobs are helping to address the challenge of youth unemployment.

We envisage that 60 per cent of the production capacity of this petroleum refinery can meet the entire requirement of Nigeria while the remaining 40 per cent is earmarked for export. Exporting refined petroleum products will not only save the huge amounts of foreign exchange but will also trigger a massive inflow of the same into the domestic economy. The retained market foreign exchange can be invested in other projects that will stimulate more diversification of the Nigerian economy.

We surmounted numerous obstacles in our journey to build this refinery. To bring Dimensional Cargoes close to the site, we developed a port with four quays, which has a quay loading bearing capacity of 25 tonnes per square meters. This was done to bridge the distance between Apapa Port and our project site. The company also invested in 2,570 construction equipment including 2,238 civil construction equipment and 332 mechanical construction equipment.

The Petrochemical Plant is designed to produce 77 different high-performance grades of polypropylene. Petrochemical is the source of raw materials for many manufacturing and assembling plants. Products from the plant will serve as raw materials for the production of polyvinyl chloride (PVC), which is used extensively across a broad range of industrial, technical, and everyday applications including widespread use in building, transport, packaging, electrical/electronic and healthcare applications.

These new projects will no doubt, create linkages in the Nigerian economy leading to the evolution of ancillary industries that will use their byproducts as starting materials.

https://www.vanguardngr.com/2024/07/dangote-if-we-knew-the-magnitude-of-what-we-were-going-into-we-would-have/

44 Likes 6 Shares

Re: DANGOTE: If We Knew The Magnitude Of What We Were Going Into, We Would Have . . by adamma24: 8:20am On Jul 20
The cabals just want to frustrate this dangote guy....

121 Likes 4 Shares

Re: DANGOTE: If We Knew The Magnitude Of What We Were Going Into, We Would Have . . by san4P(m): 8:30am On Jul 20
Good work Dangote... Kudos... Thank GOD for this milestone...

57 Likes 5 Shares

Re: DANGOTE: If We Knew The Magnitude Of What We Were Going Into, We Would Have . . by jkpbestseries: 9:03am On Jul 20
Cabals are fighting Dangote at all corners because illegal monies they are making won't be there again

120 Likes 4 Shares

Re: DANGOTE: If We Knew The Magnitude Of What We Were Going Into, We Would Have . . by descarado: 9:11am On Jul 20
This man should zip it. Nigeria was placed on hold cos of him. We are here today cos of this thief and his enablers.

He don't get his way again and he is complaining.

118 Likes 10 Shares

Re: DANGOTE: If We Knew The Magnitude Of What We Were Going Into, We Would Have . . by Anguldi(m): 9:29am On Jul 20
cool
Re: DANGOTE: If We Knew The Magnitude Of What We Were Going Into, We Would Have . . by payaseriy: 9:49am On Jul 20
adamma24:
The cabals just want to frustrate this dangote guy....
dangote is one of the reason Nigeria is backward

Abeg who get Ogbono soup wey e nor dey use... i fit trek anywhere to carry am ryt now

78 Likes 3 Shares

Re: DANGOTE: If We Knew The Magnitude Of What We Were Going Into, We Would Have . . by heniford2: 10:18am On Jul 20
Good I tap into dangote wealth.dude is trying

11 Likes 2 Shares

Re: DANGOTE: If We Knew The Magnitude Of What We Were Going Into, We Would Have . . by franchasofficia: 10:40am On Jul 20
adamma24:
The cabals just want to frustrate this dangote guy....
It took too long to happen if truly any cabal is after him, next undecided

5 Likes

Re: DANGOTE: If We Knew The Magnitude Of What We Were Going Into, We Would Have . . by adamma24: 10:44am On Jul 20
payaseriy:
dangote is one of the reason Nigeria is backward

So which do you prefer??....the cabals or dangote.....atleast the devil you know is better than the angel you don't...

12 Likes 1 Share

Re: DANGOTE: If We Knew The Magnitude Of What We Were Going Into, We Would Have . . by tanigororo: 10:47am On Jul 20
Bringing back industrialisation back to Africa,
Atiku should do another massive project, Peter Obi should do his own too. We will be good

3 Likes 1 Share

Re: DANGOTE: If We Knew The Magnitude Of What We Were Going Into, We Would Have . . by payaseriy: 10:55am On Jul 20
adamma24:


So which do you prefer??....the cabals or dangote.....atleast the devil you know is better than the angel you don't...
honestly i don't care

6 Likes

Re: DANGOTE: If We Knew The Magnitude Of What We Were Going Into, We Would Have . . by Charleys: 10:58am On Jul 20
adamma24:
The cabals just want to frustrate this dangote guy....
the same way he has been frustrating his competition

19 Likes

Re: DANGOTE: If We Knew The Magnitude Of What We Were Going Into, We Would Have . . by adamma24: 11:00am On Jul 20
Charleys:
the same way he has been frustrating his competition

Yeah...one vital valid point...funny thing is that the cabals helped him then...now na them dey frustrate am...

7 Likes

Re: DANGOTE: If We Knew The Magnitude Of What We Were Going Into, We Would Have . . by PARADIZEPRIEST: 11:20am On Jul 20
You knew because you have been to major refineries world over angry

1 Like

Re: DANGOTE: If We Knew The Magnitude Of What We Were Going Into, We Would Have . . by PARADIZEPRIEST: 11:21am On Jul 20
PARADIZEPRIEST:
You knew because you have been to major refineries world over angry
END THIS MONOPOLY THAT STARTED SINCE IBB regime AND NIGERIA ECONOMY WILL BOOM AGAIN. angry

7 Likes

Re: DANGOTE: If We Knew The Magnitude Of What We Were Going Into, We Would Have . . by LillyandDaisy: 11:50am On Jul 20
It may not happen now, it may not be this generation or the next, but one thing is certain, one day Black people will get it right

4 Likes

Re: DANGOTE: If We Knew The Magnitude Of What We Were Going Into, We Would Have . . by SpaceX: 12:10pm On Jul 20
Charleys:
the same way he has been frustrating his competition
Competitors

5 Likes

Re: DANGOTE: If We Knew The Magnitude Of What We Were Going Into, We Would Have . . by Lavor234: 12:30pm On Jul 20
When I heard that he wanted the government to direct all marketers to him, I realised that he wanted to continue the monopolization of Nigeria.
He did it with sugar and cement before BUA came into the picture.

I also want an expose of how he acquired Benue Cement.
It must have been sold to him for peanuts.

Mr. Man compete if not, exit the market.
Just imagine it's like Glo saying NCC wants to destroy them because NCC dod not allow Glo to offer sole telecommunications services.

He is crying but not as much as the families his crazy drivers crush daily

16 Likes 1 Share

Re: DANGOTE: If We Knew The Magnitude Of What We Were Going Into, We Would Have . . by DeltaBachelor(m): 1:53pm On Jul 20
Na wa o !
Re: DANGOTE: If We Knew The Magnitude Of What We Were Going Into, We Would Have . . by EyeCumInPiss: 1:53pm On Jul 20
Just like the druggie that grabbed power in the name of emilokan, without knowing the magnitude of what is involved in good governance. grin

8 Likes 1 Share

Re: DANGOTE: If We Knew The Magnitude Of What We Were Going Into, We Would Have . . by smokeyupu(m): 1:54pm On Jul 20
WHAT 😂
Re: DANGOTE: If We Knew The Magnitude Of What We Were Going Into, We Would Have . . by Franchise21(m): 1:55pm On Jul 20
Hmm
Re: DANGOTE: If We Knew The Magnitude Of What We Were Going Into, We Would Have . . by Chikel20000(m): 1:56pm On Jul 20
adamma24:
The cabals just want to frustrate this dangote guy....
same way they want to frustrate Tinubu?

4 Likes

Re: DANGOTE: If We Knew The Magnitude Of What We Were Going Into, We Would Have . . by kingsways: 1:57pm On Jul 20
These evil people want to make sure they frustrate the refinery

2 Likes

Re: DANGOTE: If We Knew The Magnitude Of What We Were Going Into, We Would Have . . by theophorus(m): 1:57pm On Jul 20
Hmmm!
Let's just hope for the Best.
Re: DANGOTE: If We Knew The Magnitude Of What We Were Going Into, We Would Have . . by jericco1(m): 1:58pm On Jul 20
Chill
Re: DANGOTE: If We Knew The Magnitude Of What We Were Going Into, We Would Have . . by subcbouy: 1:58pm On Jul 20
jkpbestseries:
Cabals are fighting Dangote at all corners because illegal monies they are making won't be there again
exactly! Money is shifting hands; they are now crying fouls. Nigeria and corruption will not leave soon.

2 Likes

Re: DANGOTE: If We Knew The Magnitude Of What We Were Going Into, We Would Have . . by abobote: 1:58pm On Jul 20
jkpbestseries:
Cabals are fighting Dangote at all corners because illegal monies they are making won't be there again
Dangote himself is part of the cabal

8 Likes 1 Share

Re: DANGOTE: If We Knew The Magnitude Of What We Were Going Into, We Would Have . . by sleek214(m): 2:00pm On Jul 20
I know it will be difficult to refine crude oil 🛢️ to produce fuel and sell the fuel below what it is sold at international market when you're not getting the crude oil for free.

2 Likes

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