Dangote receives $600 million backing for fertiliser expansion project

15 Jun 2026
Financial Nigeria

Summary

This investment marks another important milestone in our long-standing partnership with Africa Finance Corporation as we embark on the next phase of Dangote Fertiliser’s growth – Aliko Dangote.

President and CEO of Dangote Industries Limited, Aliko Dangote

Greenview Fertiliser Corp., the fertiliser holding company of the Dangote Group, has received a $600 million facility from Africa Finance Corporation (AFC).

The AFC said the financial backing will help drive the Dangote Group’s $7 billion fertiliser expansion programme, designed to triple production capacity in Nigeria and establish a major new manufacturing platform in Ethiopia.

Dangote’s fertiliser expansion programme is projected to increase Nigeria’s urea fertiliser production capacity from 3 million metric tonnes per annum (MTPA) to 9 MTPA, and to add a new 3 MTPA urea fertiliser plant in Ethiopia. It is expected to strengthen regional food security, support agricultural productivity, reduce dependence on imported fertiliser, and bolster the continent’s position as a supplier to international markets.

AFC said the transaction deepens its longstanding partnership with Dangote Group across some of Africa’s most significant industrial projects. The continent’s leading infrastructure financier served as a co-coordinating bank for a $3 billion syndicated loan to the Dangote Refinery. It also recently received full repayment of its $300 million senior term loan to Dangote Industries Limited, which partly financed the refinery’s construction. 

AFC added that redeploying double the amount repaid into Dangote Group underscores its model of providing early-stage risk capital, with further investment in the next generation of transformative projects once assets reach stable, cash-generative operations.

“This investment marks another important milestone in our long-standing partnership with AFC as we embark on the next phase of Dangote Fertiliser’s growth,” said Aliko Dangote, President and Chief Executive of Dangote Industries Limited.

In a statement shared with Financial Nigeria, AFC said the fertiliser investment positions Africa to get ahead of structural trends shaping long-term development priorities, including rapid population growth, rising food demand, climate-related pressures on agricultural systems, and the need to capture greater value from natural resources. 

Recent disruptions to global supply chains and commodity markets following the Russia-Ukraine war and the Middle East crisis have further underscored the risks of dependence on imported agricultural inputs. Despite holding some of the world’s largest natural gas reserves and a quarter of its uncultivated arable land, Africa remains reliant on imported fertiliser.

Samaila Zubairu, President & CEO of AFC, highlights data showing that Africa’s 1.5 billion people consume just 6 million tonnes of urea annually, compared with 40 million tonnes in India and 50 million tonnes in China, despite having similar-sized populations. He said closing this productivity gap is essential to Africa’s food security.


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