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Aliko Dangote’s wealth hits $23.9bn, becomes 86th richest man globally –Forbes

Alhaji Aliko Dangote, President/Chief Executive of Dangote Industries Limited

*Aliko Dangote, President/Chief Executive of Dangote Industries Limited is ranked 86th richest person in the world with net worth at $23.9 billion, primarily due to his 92.3 percent stake in Dangote Petroleum Refinery and Petrochemicals, according to Forbes estimates

Isola Moses | ñ

Nigerian Billionaire Aliko Dangote has seen his wealth nearly double to $23.9 billion, according to Forbes, which ranks the foremost entrepreneur and industrialist as the wealthiest person in Africa, and 86th in the world.

It is recalled that Forbes ranked Alhaji Aliko Dangote, President/Chief Executive of Dangote Industries Limited (DIL) as the 144th richest person in the world in 2024 with $13.4 billion.

Forbes estimates Dangote’s net worth at $23.9 billion, primarily due to his 92.3 percent stake in Dangote Petroleum Refinery & Petrochemicals.

67-year-old Dangote is, once again, adjudged as one of the 100 top richest individuals worldwide, a position he has not held since 2018, according to the Forbes Real-Time Billionaires List.

Dangote Group, in a statement announcing this development Tuesday, February 18, 2025, said this development had placed Alhaji Dangote “significantly ahead of South African Johann Rupert, who is ranked 161st in the world with an estimated wealth of $14.4 billion and very far above Mike Adenuga, who is the second richest in Nigeria and 481, in the world, with a net worth of $6.8 billion.”

The statement noted that Dangote disrupted the government’s oil monopoly by constructing the largest petroleum refinery in Africa. After 11 years, a $23 billion investment, and numerous challenges, the Dangote Refinery began operations last year.

Located on a vast 6,200-acre site in the Lekki Free Zone, the refinery, at full capacity, will process a remarkable 650,000 barrels per day (b/d), making it the seventh-largest refinery in the world and the largest in Africa.

Additionally, the refinery’s adjacent petrochemical complex has an annual production capacity of 3 million metric tons of urea, making it Africa’s largest fertiliser producer.

The Dangote Refinery is already having a significant impact on global energy markets, the conglomerate stated.

Imports of petroleum into Nigeria are on track to reach an eight-year low, affecting European refiners that have traditionally sold to Nigeria, according to energy intelligence firm Vortexa.

Furthermore, Nigeria has become a net exporter of jet fuel, naphtha (a solvent used in varnishes, laundry soaps, and cleaning fluids), and fuel oil, according to S&P Global.

The company further said: “Dangote sees the refinery as part of a larger vision to transform Nigeria, one of the world’s largest crude oil producers, into a major producer of refined petroleum products.

“This would enable Nigeria to compete with European refineries and supply gasoline to Nigerian consumers.”

Dangote, in a recent interview with Forbes, also stated: “I want to provide a blueprint for industrialisation across Africa.

“We have to build our nation by ourselves.

“We have to build our continent by ourselves, not [rely on] foreign investment.”

According to DIL, he believes Africa has long been “a mere dumping ground for finished products,” and his refinery represents “a pivotal step in ensuring that Africa can refine its own crude oil, thereby creating wealth and prosperity for its vast population.”

Dangote said the refinery is the biggest risk of his life and without success, it would have affected him greatly.

Speaking about his decision to embark on the project, Dangote said: “It was the biggest risk of my life.

“If this didn’t work, I was dead.”

Zainab Usman, director of the Africa Programme at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, according to Forbes, said Nigerians see Dangote as a hero and a real industrialist transforming the country.

“He is seen in most parts of Nigeria as a hero. He is seen as a real industrialist who builds things,” she said.

A professor of African studies at the Soka University of America, Chika Ezeanya, also corroborated this view, noting that Dangote is meeting the needs of consumers on the continent.

“I think he’s believed staunchly in the fact that Nigerians need products that he has to offer,” he said while adding, “Governments can come and go, policies can be changed, but the needs of the Nigerian consumer will only grow and expand.”

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