UN chief hinges Africa’s food security on Dangote, global partnerships

Roadside food market in Nigeria

Deputy Secretary-General of the United Nations, Amina Mohammed, has underscored the strategic importance of Dangote Industries Limited, particularly Dangote Fertiliser Limited, in addressing Africa’s mounting food security challenges, calling for stronger global partnerships to scale its impact.

Speaking during a visit to the company’s industrial complex in Ibeju-Lekki, Lagos, Mohammed said the United Nations would prioritise amplifying scalable solutions capable of mitigating the continent’s food crisis, describing Dangote’s integrated industrial model as a critical pathway.

“I think the UN’s job here is to amplify and to put visibility on the possibilities of mitigating a food security crisis, and this is one of them,” she said.

“I hope that when we go back, we can continue to engage partners and countries that should collaborate with Dangote Industries,” she added.

Her remarks came at a time of heightened concern over food shortages and supply chain disruptions across Africa, driven by global economic pressures, climate-related shocks and geopolitical tensions, particularly in the Middle East.

President/Chief Executive of Dangote Industries Limited, Aliko Dangote, said the group had ramped up exports of urea and Premium Motor Spirit (PMS) to African markets affected by supply disruptions arising from the crisis.

Noting the widening impact of the situation across the continent, Dangote said the company had intensified shipments of fertiliser to support agricultural productivity and ease supply constraints.

“The challenges are many. One is of urea, which is a fertiliser that we have. I think in the last couple of days we’ve been loading mostly to African countries, which we were not doing before. And now it’s to do with petroleum products, which we are now sending mainly to African countries,” he said.

He added that the refinery had shipped about 17 cargoes of petrol to African countries to cushion the impact of the crisis, leveraging its 650,000 barrels per day capacity to stabilise supply across multiple regions.

On feedstock supply, Dangote commended the Nigerian National Petroleum Company Limited for increasing crude deliveries to the refinery in March, noting that volumes rose to 10 cargoes—six supplied in naira and four in dollars—to support domestic fuel availability.

Despite the improvement, the supply remains below the 19 cargoes required for optimal operations, with the refinery continuing to bridge the gap through imports from the United States and other African producers.

Dangote also expressed concern over the unwillingness of international oil companies operating in Nigeria to sell to the refinery, stating that their preference for selling crude to traders forces it to repurchase at higher costs, with broader implications for the economy.

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