A major realignment in global energy trade has placed Nigeria at the centre of the aviation fuel market, with the Dangote Petroleum Refinery emerging as the world’s largest exporter of jet fuel in April 2026.
The milestone, highlighted in a recent S&P Global Energy report, underscores how disruptions in traditional supply routes created new opportunities for alternative suppliers. According to data from S&P Global Commodities at Sea, the Lekki-based refinery climbed to the top position after conflict in the Middle East altered established fuel trade patterns and tightened supplies across key international markets.
Speaking to S&P Global during an interview at the refinery, Chief Executive Officer David Bird said the facility responded swiftly to changing market conditions. The report noted that once the Middle East conflict began, Dangote shifted operations into what Bird described as “max jet mode,” enabling the refinery to significantly increase aviation fuel exports at a time when global demand for alternative sources was rising.
The development comes as the refinery reaches full operational capacity of approximately 650,000 barrels per day following a gradual production ramp-up. Maintaining output at that scale, Bird said, requires increasingly sophisticated trading operations, stronger logistics coordination and more reliable supply chains as the business expands beyond dependence on locally available crude.
S&P Global also highlighted the refinery’s flexible production model, which allows it to optimise fuel yields through the importation of feedstocks such as GTL naphtha and Bonny condensate. The strategy has enabled the facility to increase gasoline production beyond its original design configuration while adapting to changing market opportunities.
Beyond refining, the company is steadily evolving into a major international energy trader. Rather than operating solely as a domestic processor of crude oil, the refinery is moving toward a merchant refining model in which both crude and refined products are actively traded across global markets.
That transition is supported by a broader diversification strategy which enable the refinery to currently process around 40 different crude grades and residue blends, extending well beyond Nigeria’s traditional light sweet crude. Plans are already in place to expand that capability further, strengthening its competitiveness in international markets.
Bird revealed that the long-term ambition is to increase production capacity to 1.4 million barrels per day. Achieving that target would require sourcing additional crude supplies from regions including the United States, the Middle East and potentially South America.
The refinery is also pursuing long-term offtake agreements with governments, airlines and national oil companies, reducing reliance on spot-market sales while building more predictable export relationships. According to Bird, the company aims to move closer to the operational flexibility of global refining benchmarks such as Singapore’s Pulau Bukom refinery, which processes more than 100 crude grades.
Investments are being explored in regional infrastructure projects, including proposed storage and logistics hubs in Namibia, pipeline discussions in Zambia and additional storage facilities across parts of Central and East Africa. These projects form part of a wider vision to strengthen energy trade networks across the continent.
At the heart of that vision is the transformation of the Lekki Free Zone into a major industrial and energy hub powered by refining, petrochemicals and integrated export logistics.
The refinery’s rise coincides with heightened volatility in global energy markets. Tensions involving the United States, Iran and Israel disrupted movements around the Strait of Hormuz, a critical shipping corridor responsible for roughly 20% of global oil and fuel trade. Intermittent restrictions and threats to shipping activities tightened supply chains and pushed jet fuel prices higher worldwide.
Those conditions opened the door for suppliers outside the Middle East, with Dangote Refinery emerging as one of the biggest beneficiaries of the shift.
For Nigeria, the refinery’s emergence as the world’s leading jet fuel exporter signals the growing influence of a homegrown industrial asset in reshaping global energy flows at a time when markets are searching for new centres of supply.