Industrial unease is brewing around the Dangote Refinery following explosive allegations by Africa’s richest man, Alhaji Aliko Dangote, that the Nigerian Union of Petroleum and Natural Gas Workers (NUPENG) is imposing an extra ₦50,000 charge on every truck loading fuel from the multibillion-dollar facility.
Dangote, who made the revelation in Lagos on Thursday, warned that such hidden charges are not only unjustifiable but also harmful to ordinary Nigerians who are already groaning under the weight of high living costs.
“This refinery was meant to reduce Nigeria’s dependence on imports and bring down fuel costs. But when unions begin to place ₦50,000 levies on every truck that moves products out, the costs are simply passed down the chain. At the end, it is the ordinary Nigerian that pays,” Dangote lamented.
The Numbers: A Hidden Half-Billion Naira Weekly
A quick calculation of the alleged levy reveals the staggering economic impact. At an estimated 2,000 trucks loading daily, the NUPENG charges could translate to ₦100 million every day. Over just five days, that figure balloons to ₦500 million siphoned away—money that does not go into refinery infrastructure, safety improvements, or public coffers, but allegedly into private union pockets.
Economists warn that these costs do not vanish at the refinery gates. Instead, they travel directly into fuel pump prices, transport fares, food costs, and ultimately, inflation—piling additional burdens on millions of households.
Refining Oil or Refining Corruption?
Dangote’s statement has sparked fresh debate about Nigeria’s entrenched culture of rent-seeking and regulatory exploitation. The refinery, launched with hopes of being a turning point for Nigeria’s economy, was envisioned as a symbol of self-reliance, industrial rebirth, and reduced fuel import bills.
But critics argue that predatory levies risk crippling its impact before it even reaches full operational scale.
“This is not union activism. This is extortion,” one industry analyst told Coolnews. “If government cannot protect such a massive national investment from predatory levies, then what we are refining is not crude oil—it is corruption.”
Government Under Pressure
Calls are now mounting on the Federal Government to step in, investigate the allegations, and shield the refinery from what some stakeholders describe as “industrial sabotage.”
Observers say failure to act decisively could deter future private investment in critical infrastructure and further weaken public trust in Nigeria’s ability to manage reforms in the oil and gas sector.
For now, the silence from NUPENG leadership and the Ministry of Labour has only fueled more public anger, as Nigerians brace for another possible hike in pump prices.
As one Lagos commuter put it: “When they collect ₦50,000 from every truck, it is not Dangote who suffers. It is us—the people.”



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