Dangote Refinery slashed its petroleum price by N75 per liter to N1,175 yesterday, citing falling global crude costs after Middle East tensions eased. The cut took effect at midnight.

The refinery announced a reduction in its gantry price from N1,250 per litre to N1,175 per litre, effective from 12:00 a.m. on June 16, 2026, citing the de-escalation of geopolitical tensions in the Middle East and the resulting decline in crude costs. Fuel marketers received the circular Monday evening.
The refinery also cut its coastal loading price by N100,575 per metric tonne, dropping from N1,595,790 per metric tonne to N1,495,215 per metric tonne, according to documents seen by NaijaDesk. That is a bigger reduction, measured in absolute naira, than the gantry figure suggests.
What Triggered the Cut
The development followed a sharp fall in Brent and West Texas Intermediate crude blends to $83 and $80 per barrel, respectively, after United States President Donald Trump announced a peace deal with Iran. Cheaper crude at the source means a cheaper product at the gantry. The arithmetic is that direct.
The price reduction came after easing global oil market tensions following reports of negotiations between the United States and Iran over the reopening of the Strait of Hormuz. Supply fears that had kept Brent elevated through much of April and May dissolved inside a fortnight.
Dangote Refinery Petroleum Price: Impact on Marketers
Fuel marketers had reportedly purchased products at prices around N1,240 per liter before the latest adjustment, suggesting that distributors may have room to reduce retail pump prices if the lower costs are passed through to consumers. That pass-through is not guaranteed. Margins matter. Retail fuel prices are expected to drop significantly across Nigeria in the coming weeks from their current price of between N1,317 and N1,335 per liter in Abuja.
Pump prices in Lagos’s Mile 2 depot corridor tracked slightly lower Monday, traders confirmed by phone. The circular carried a direct assurance to customers. “Kindly note that all outstanding unloaded gantry volumes will be repriced at the new rate effective 12:00 AM, June 16, 2026,” the notice stated, adding: “We sincerely appreciate your continued patronage and assure you of our unwavering commitment to reliable product supply.”
Refinery’s Growing Role as Price Setter
Since ramping up operations, Dangote Refinery has increasingly become a major price setter in Nigeria’s petroleum market, its decisions now shaping pricing conversations among depot owners, marketers, and regulators alike. That influence was marginal two years ago. It is not marginal now.
The development is likely to intensify competition among fuel suppliers and could influence pricing strategies across Nigeria’s deregulated downstream petroleum sector, with market analysts saying the refinery’s decision reflects the strong correlation between international crude oil prices and domestic fuel costs under the current deregulated framework.
The reduction is being viewed as one of the earliest clear indications of how changes in international crude prices can quickly filter into Nigeria’s domestic fuel market following deregulation. And with the Dangote refinery petroleum price now at N1,175 per liter, the pressure on rival suppliers at Apapa and Calabar jetties to follow is immediate.
