The closure of the Strait of Hormuz due to the ongoing US-Iran conflict has affected the flow of crude oil. Nigeria is now exporting petroleum products from its coast refinery which was set up with the assistance of China and India, according to a recent report.

According to an article in the news portal Business Insider Africa, the Lagos-based refinery, owned by Africa's richest man, Aliko Dangote, is operating at full capacity of 650,000 barrels per day and supplying fuel to West, Central, and East Africa.

According to the report, the products from the coast refinery have been exported to countries ranging from Senegal to Mozambique, and exports to Europe (the Netherlands and UK) and Asia are also increasing.

The article states, "The refinery's construction demonstrates the unique combination of Chinese industrial capability and Indian engineering expertise, which underpins both the speed of delivery and the scale of the project, compared to the typically lengthy timeframes associated with Western contractors."

More than eight Chinese companies have been involved since the project's inception, providing the industrial base that enabled the massive scale of the project to be completed.

India's role has focused on engineering management and project sustainability. The article states that in January, the Dangote Group renewed a $350 million contract with Engineers India Limited (EIL) to support the expansion of the refinery and petrochemicals complex.

EIL will serve as the project management consultant and engineering, procurement, and construction management consultant, similar to its role during the initial phase, which began in 2024. At the peak of construction, the project employed over 30,000 Nigerian workers, along with 6,400 Indian and 3,250 Chinese workers, reflecting the refinery's vast size and technical requirements.

The article further states that approximately 11,000 trained Indian workers were also employed, which regional stakeholders questioned, although the company stated that the refinery's complexity required global expertise.

It states that between 2016 and 2018, the group sent Nigerian graduates to Mumbai-based Bharat Petroleum Corporation Limited for training in refinery operations, maintenance, and production to build local technical capacity before the refinery's commissioning. The program involved approximately 800 Nigerian citizens, trained in batches of 50 over a period of 24 months. This training provided them with hands-on experience with large-scale refining systems in India, home to the Jamnagar Refinery, the world's largest refining complex.

The article states, "In particular, Indian engineer Devkumar V.G. Edwin, who served as Vice President of Oil and Gas at Dangote Industries, played a key role in the refinery's technical development and operational launch."

The article highlights that the refinery's impact has begun to be felt in trade flows, with Nigeria becoming a net exporter of refined petroleum products for the first time in March, reversing decades of import dependence.