Economy
The World Happiness Report 2026 Places Nigeria at Position 106
World Happiness Report 2026 ranks Nigeria 106th globally, a one-place drop from 2025. Analysis examines economic pressures, security, and social trust in the context of daily Nigerian life.

Nigeria is the 106th Happiest Nation. What Does That Number Actually Mean?
Published: 23 March, 2026
Finland did it again. For the ninth year running, it tops the World Happiness Report. Iceland and Denmark follow. But this is not about them. Look further down the 2026 list, past Costa Rica breaking into the global top five, and you’ll find Nigeria at position 106.
In Africa, we are not in the top five. We trail Mauritius (73rd globally), Libya (81st), Algeria (83rd), Tunisia (105th), and South Africa. This brings us to the real question. What does a happiness ranking actually measure for the average Nigerian?
More Than a Feeling
The report uses a cold, hard tool: Cantril’s ladder. Imagine a ladder from zero to ten. The top is your best possible life, the bottom the worst. Researchers from the Gallup World Poll ask: which step are you on right now? Your answer is your life evaluation score.
But there is a catch. That score is then explained by six variables. The model accounts for GDP per capita, social support, healthy life expectancy, freedom to make life choices, generosity, and perceptions of corruption. The rest is a residual—the cultural fabric of a nation. For Nigeria, the 2026 score is a direct reflection of navigating a complex reality.
The Naira’s Heavy Footprint
The economic variable carries immense weight. The report uses the log of GDP per capita at purchasing power parity. The International Monetary Fund forecasts Nigeria’s at $9,860 for 2026. That suggests a slow recovery.
Now, contrast this with the ground truth. The National Bureau of Statistics reported on March 16, 2026, that headline inflation dropped to 15.06%. Food inflation was 12.12%. This is a sharp decline from the terrifying peaks of 2024. But the damage is done. A salary that covered basics two years ago is now stretched thin. This applies direct pressure on the wellbeing the report tries to capture.
“When the price of a ‘painter’ of garri changes every market day, the ladder of life feels shaky.” – Chika Mbonu, a civil servant in Lagos, speaking in March 2026.
A Strained Safety Net
The social support metric asks: do you have someone to count on? In Nigeria, the answer has always been the extended family. This informal network compensates for a weak formal system.
The trouble is, economic pressure is breaking the net. When everyone is struggling, who has the capacity to help? The scale of need is official. The National Social Safety Nets Coordinating Office manages a National Social Register with over 15 million households as of late 2025. That number, from the Federal Ministry of Humanitarian Affairs, reveals the vulnerability our family systems are trying to hold.
Screens and Satisfaction
The 2026 report has a new focus: digital life. Its research found a sweet spot. Less than one hour of social media daily links to higher wellbeing than zero use. But the global average is now 2.5 hours—a level tied to lower life satisfaction.
It highlights a sharp happiness decline among youth in English-speaking nations, pinned partly on passive scrolling. For Nigerian youth glued to Instagram and TikTok, this is a warning. The comparative effect on our own wellbeing is an emerging, silent variable.
Freedom, Giving, and Fair Play
The freedom question is simple: “Are you satisfied with your freedom to choose what you do with your life?” For many here, the answer is constrained by the job market, by security fears. Generosity, measured by charitable donations, often remains high. It’s in our culture.
Then there’s corruption. The report uses a Gallup World Poll question: is corruption widespread in government? Nigeria’s score here has barely budged for years. This perception eats at trust. It corrodes the belief in a fair system.
“The data suggests that where citizens believe their efforts can lead to fair outcomes, life evaluations improve. The opposite is also true.” – Professor Aisha Mohammed, a policy analyst at the Centre for the Study of the Economies of Africa, in a March 2026 briefing.
Security as a Health Issue
Healthy life expectancy data comes from the World Health Organization. But security concerns in regions across Nigeria cut direct lines to health. Instability disrupts farming, fuelling food insecurity and malnutrition. It restricts movement for commerce, education, and healthcare.
This creates a background anxiety. A trader in the North-East weighing the risk of a market trip has a different calculus of freedom than someone in a stable area. That anxiety filters straight into the life evaluation score.
The Regional Reality
In Sub-Saharan Africa, Nigeria ranks 17th out of 40 countries. We are in the middle of the pack. The regional average is low, dragged by common struggles with economy and institutions.
The global top ten, dominated by Nordic nations, shows what high-functioning institutions and comprehensive welfare achieve. That is the gap. As the 2026 report notes, Mauritius (73rd) leads Africa, followed by Libya (81st), Algeria (83rd), and Tunisia (105th). We are behind.
Policy and the Ladder
The report’s authors argue wellbeing should guide policy as much as GDP. Each variable is a policy lever. Boosting GDP per capita needs reforms that create real jobs. Strengthening social support means expanding safety nets formally.
But there’s a catch. These issues are tangled. Growth without equity fails. Anti-corruption drives without visible convictions fail to shift perception. It’s all connected.
The Weight of 106
For the average Nigerian, position 106 is not an abstract rank. It is the ATM queue. It is the electricity bill. It is school fees and the cost of drugs. It is the doubt about a fair contract or an honest police officer.
These daily realities build the ladder. The slip from 105 to 106 is minor statistically. But it signals that for many, the step felt less secure over the past three years. Cumulative inflation, insecurity, and eroded trust offset any small gains elsewhere.
“Happiness research tells us that beyond a certain income threshold, the quality of relationships and the fairness of society matter more than extra cash. Our focus must broaden.” – Dr. Ben Akabueze, Director-General of the Budget Office of the Federation, at a public lecture in February 2026.
What Comes Next?
The data for the 2026 report covers 2023 to 2025. Policies launched in late 2025 or 2026 will only show up later. The real test is whether they can move the needles Gallup measures. Can they lift real incomes, mend social cohesion, and rebuild public trust?
The answers will write Nigeria’s next happiness chapter.
A Number to Ponder
106 is just a number. It smooths over the vast experiences of 200 million people. Some are on the ladder’s top step, many are on the bottom.
But the report’s value is its consistent method. It’s a comparable benchmark. The one-place drop is small. The direction matters more. It asks policymakers one thing: what will make the average citizen step up one rung next year?
The conversation starts by acknowledging the daily pressures behind that number. It continues with policies for a good life, not just a growing economy. The next ranking is due in March 2027.
The work that counts happens every day between now and then.
Economy
Multinational Exodus in Nigeria Deepens with N94 Trillion Loss
Multinational exits have cost Nigeria N94 trillion in output. While official forex rates stabilize at N1,384, the manufacturing crisis stays acute in 2026.


The Multinational Exodus in Nigeria Deepens with a N94 Trillion Hole
Published: March 24, 2026
How do you measure an economy bleeding out? Start with N94 trillion. Add over 20,000 direct jobs. That is the quantified damage from major international companies leaving Nigeria since 2021. A report from the Manufacturers Association of Nigeria confirms this accelerating trend through the first quarter of this year, as Premium Times noted in March 2026. The domestic market cannot replace this lost output. Not even close.
Here is the thing about the numbers
The N94 trillion figure is an aggregation. It covers divestments, asset sales, and profits that could not be repatriated over five years. The trouble is, new money is not coming in to replace it. Data from the National Bureau of Statistics shows foreign direct investment inflows have declined for four consecutive years (NBS, 2025). The job losses, concentrated in manufacturing, ripple outwards. They hit supply chains and service providers hard.
Look at the names. Procter & Gamble, GSK, and Sanofi have exited manufacturing. Unilever stopped making home care and skin cleansing products. Bolt Food and Jumia Food shut down in late 2023. Each closure cited a similar cluster of problems.
What exactly are companies running from?
Ask any business operator in Lagos or Port Harcourt. The list is short and brutal. A survey by the Lagos Chamber of Commerce and Industry pins the primary constraints as foreign exchange volatility, persistent insecurity, and unreliable power (LCCI, 2025). The cost of generating electricity with diesel alone consumes massive chunks of operational budgets.
But there is a catch. Even though the Central Bank of Nigeria has unified the exchange rate window, access to foreign currency remains a daily struggle. As BusinessDay reported in early 2026, implementation gaps frustrate corporate treasury departments. You cannot plan when you cannot source dollars for raw materials.
You cannot run a factory where you cannot source inputs, guarantee staff safety, or predict your energy cost from one week to the next. The Director-General of the Manufacturers Association of Nigeria, Segun Ajayi-Kadir, stated in January 2026.
Insecurity along major transit routes inflates logistics costs and insurance premiums. Moving goods from Lagos to Abuja can cost as much as shipping a container from China to Lagos. These are the mundane realities that kill profitability.
The policy response feels like a broken record
The government of President Bola Tinubu has announced interventions. The 2024 and 2025 budgets allocated funds for national security and infrastructure. The rhetoric is all about improving the ease of doing business.
Here is the reality check. The total capital expenditure in the 2025 budget was approximately N11.99 trillion (Budget Office of the Federation, 2025). The amount lost to corporate exits in five years is nearly eight times that single year’s capital budget. The scale of the outflow dwarfs planned public investment.
Tax incentives exist on paper. The experience on the ground involves navigating delays at the Federal Inland Revenue Service and the Nigeria Customs Service. A company choosing between Nigeria and Ghana will weigh these operational headaches heavily.
Who fills the space left behind?
The exit creates opportunities. Local conglomerates like the Dangote Group, BUA Group, and Flour Mills of Nigeria have expanded into vacated segments. This shift promises greater domestic ownership.
But capacity has limits. The Aliko Dangote-owned refinery represents exceptional scale. Most local manufacturers lack the balance sheet to absorb the massive capital expenditure and technology the departing multinationals possessed. The quality and variety of goods may decline.
Job creation from local firms is slower and more cautious. They face the same headwinds, often with less access to global financing. The net result is a shrinkage in formal sector employment.
Local production is growing, but it is a marathon, not a sprint. We cannot replace 50 years of multinational investment in two years. The CEO of a major Nigerian food and beverage company commented anonymously to Vanguard in February 2026.


The view from the street in Ikeja or Apapa
For workers, it means fewer stable, pensionable jobs. The 20,000 lost positions were mostly formal roles with benefits. Many move into the informal sector or precarious gig work. The unemployment rate is officially 4.1% (NBS, Q3 2023), though a methodology change affects comparability. Underemployment is the larger issue on the ground.
Consumers face higher prices and reduced choice. Imported alternatives get more expensive with currency depreciation. Locally produced substitutes may have inconsistent quality. The standard of living adjusts downward.
Landlords in industrial areas see vacancies rise. Local vendors lose their largest clients. The economic ecosystem around a major plant deteriorates fast. The impact is hyper-local and deeply felt.
Is there a path to reverse the trend?
Stopping the exodus requires treating root causes. Foreign exchange management needs consistency and transparency. Investors require a predictable window to repatriate dividends. The Central Bank of Nigeria has made commitments, yet market confidence lags, as The Cable reported in 2026. The official rate has stabilized around N1,384 per dollar, but access liquidity stays constrained.
Security of life and property is non-negotiable. Investment in policing must show results. The power sector remains a national emergency. The cost of alternative power makes manufacturing a heroic undertaking.
This brings us to coordination. Policy across the Ministry of Industry, Trade and Investment, the Central Bank, and the Ministry of Finance lacks urgency. Businesses receive mixed signals.
A single, tangible step forward
The government could establish a dedicated Presidential Delivery Unit for the top five investor complaints. This unit would track and publicly report monthly progress on foreign exchange access, port clearance times, diesel prices, and security on trade corridors. Transparency builds accountability.
It would have the authority to cut through inter-agency delays. Its mandate would focus exclusively on removing bottlenecks for existing businesses. Success would be measured by a halt in closure announcements. The current approach of generic assurances has lost credibility.
Such a unit needs a leader with direct presidential access and a small, technically competent team. Its reports should be published online in a simple dashboard. Nigerians and the international business community can then monitor progress with specific metrics. This move signals a shift from talking to doing.
So here we are
The multinational exodus in Nigeria is a story of capital, jobs, and confidence leaving. The total of N94 trillion and 20,000 jobs makes it quantifiable. The reasons are well-documented.
Reversal is possible with focused, sustained action on power, security, and foreign exchange. The alternative is a continued contraction of the formal industrial base, higher unemployment, and import dependence. The choice for policymakers in Abuja is that straightforward.
The next closure announcement may come tomorrow. The time for a different response is today.
Economy
Food Crisis Looms in Nigeria as Climate Change Devours Farm Yields
By 2026, Nigeria’s food crisis looms as climate change slashes maize and rice harvests.


Food Crisis Threatens in Nigeria as Climate Change Devours Farm Yields
Published: 27 March, 2026
How do you measure a coming storm? Start with the maize. The projected national harvest for 2026 will fall short of domestic demand. This is according to assessments by the United States Department of Agriculture and the Food and Agriculture Organization released this month. That deficit exists before accounting for a single flood or drought. The arithmetic of hunger in Nigeria is being rewritten. The data from the fields points in one direction.
The Yield Collapse is Already Here
Farmers in the north planted with the first rains. Then the rains stopped for three weeks in June. The maize withered. A survey by the International Institute of Tropical Agriculture in Kano, Kaduna, and Katsina states recorded significant maize yield reductions for the early season crop. That was in an IITA Field Report from August 2025.
Contrast this with the south. The problem there is too much water. Flash floods in Anambra, Delta, and Rivers states last October submerged thousands of hectares of rice. The National Emergency Management Agency estimated a major loss of paddy rice in its Situation Report from November 2025. Climate models predicted these patterns. The reality confirms them with brutal consistency. The margin for error in our food system is gone.
What the Price of Garri Tells You
Markets signal distress first. The price of a 50kg bag of garri jumped from N25,000 in January 2025 to N38,000 by February 2026 in Lagos. The National Bureau of Statistics reported this in March 2026. This is a 52% increase.
In many parts of the North Central zone, a mudu of beans now costs more than a litre of fuel. The headline food inflation rate was 31.7% in February 2026 on a year-on-year basis, the NBS confirmed. That number is not an abstraction. It translates to skipped meals and thinner soups for millions. The crisis lands as a concrete problem at the kitchen table.
The Policy Response is a Drop in a Bucket
The federal government announced a N200 billion climate-resilient agriculture fund in the 2026 budget. According to the Budget Office of the Federation, this represents a fraction of the total spend. The scale of the intervention fails to match the threat.
The fund aims for drought-resistant seeds and small-scale irrigation. The trouble is the implementation. Distribution networks are weak. The last major irrigation project in the Hadejia Valley started in 2018 and is still incomplete.
“The conversation about climate change adaptation stays theoretical for many farmers. Their immediate concern is the cost of fertilizer and the absence of rain.” – Dr. Aisha Bello, Agricultural Economist, Ahmadu Bello University, Zaria. Interview with Premium Times, January 2026.
State governments promote early-maturing varieties. But adoption is low. The seeds are expensive and often unavailable. As BusinessDay reported in February 2026, a bag of certified maize seed sells for over N40,000—a prohibitive cost for the average smallholder.
Why the Food Reserve Strategy is Broken
The National Food Reserve Agency has a mandate to stabilize prices. It holds a strategic grain reserve. The capacity of those silos across the country is about 300,000 metric tonnes, according to data from the Federal Ministry of Agriculture.
But there is a catch. Nigeria’s annual maize consumption exceeds 10 million metric tonnes. The reserve can cover a national shortfall for only a few weeks. The logistics of moving grain from Ibadan or Minna to areas of acute shortage are complex and costly. Past interventions saw grains arrive late or get diverted. The system lacks the transparency for a real crisis. The buffer is too small.
The Looming Spectre of Import Dependence
A shortfall creates pressure to import. The government granted duty waivers for maize in late 2025. The volume of maize imports through the Apapa port increased in the first quarter of 2026 compared to the same period in 2025, the Nigeria Ports Authority reported.
Importation provides immediate relief. But it exposes the country to volatile global prices and exchange rate fluctuations. The naira traded at N1,383.88 to the US dollar in the official market in March 2026, according to the Central Bank of Nigeria. Funding food imports strains the treasury. Policy emphasizes self-sufficiency. Reality pushes us toward greater dependence.
Look at the Map of Vulnerability
This crisis has a specific address. The World Food Programme and the Federal Ministry of Agriculture completed a joint analysis in late 2025. It identified 72 local government areas across 16 states as facing acute food insecurity, according to their assessment from December 2025.
These areas cluster in the Northeast, Northwest, and North Central. They are zones of high dependence on rain-fed agriculture. They also experience conflict and displacement. Climate stress multiplies every existing vulnerability.
Urban areas are not immune. High food prices cripple the poor in cities like Lagos, Kano, and Port Harcourt. The social contract frays when a basic necessity becomes a source of daily anxiety.
A Different Path Exists
The situation demands a shift. We treat climate change as a secondary concern for agriculture. It is now the primary determinant of productivity.
Investment must move beyond distributing seeds. Our irrigation infrastructure requires massive rehabilitation. The total irrigable land in Nigeria is over 3 million hectares. Less than 10% of this has functional irrigation, according to the Federal Ministry of Water Resources 2025 assessment.
“We have the technical knowledge and the water resources. The gap is in coordinated investment and maintenance. A farmer with a reliable water source can withstand two weeks of drought.” – Engr. Suleiman Adamu, former Minister of Water Resources. Lecture at the University of Ibadan, February 2026.
Research institutions like the IITA develop climate-smart varieties. But the pathway from the research station to the farmer’s field is clogged. A functional agricultural extension system would bridge this gap. We don’t have one. The number of agents serving millions of farmers is grossly inadequate.
Start with the Weather Forecast
The Nigeria Meteorological Agency issues seasonal rainfall predictions. It lacks the resources to get this information to rural farmers. A farmer in a remote Kebbi village may never see the forecast that decides his planting date.
One simple, actionable step exists. Leverage mobile networks. NiMET can partner with telecom companies to send free, localized weather alerts via SMS to registered farmers. The technology exists. The databases exist. This intervention would empower better decisions and reduce losses. It is a matter of connecting available dots.
The Clock is Ticking on the Next Harvest
The next major planting season begins with the rains in April and May. The conditions that led to the 2025 shortfalls will likely persist. The global climate pattern known as La Niña is fading, with a 60-70% chance of shifting to ENSO-neutral conditions by the April to June window. The World Meteorological Organization stated this in its March 2026 update.
Governments have a narrow window to deploy support. This means ensuring affordable access to the right seeds, fertilizer, and water. It means providing credible information. The alternative is another cycle of poor harvests, higher prices, and deeper hunger.
The data presents an evident trajectory. The response so far lacks the urgency the moment demands. The time for theoretical discussions is over. The fields are waiting.
NBS February 2026 Inflation Report: Official breakdown confirming the current state of food prices in Nigeria.
Economy
Dangote Refinery Helpless as Fuel Price Hikes Defy Local Production
Why can’t Nigeria’s own Dangote Refinery stop soaring fuel prices? The $20 billion facility remains helpless against supply and policy hurdles.


Dangote Refinery Confirms: ‘We Are Helpless’ as Petrol Prices Stay Volatile
Published: 26 March, 2026
A $20 billion refinery sits within Nigeria’s borders. Yet pump prices for Premium Motor Spirit keep climbing. This is the central paradox of 2026.
A Refinery Without Control
Senior executives at the Dangote Group have a word for their position on fuel pricing: helpless. They admitted it during a briefing with energy correspondents in Lagos this month. A company spokesperson laid out the external factors dictating their costs. The price of crude oil is the first major component. But here’s the catch: the refinery still depends on imports for a significant part of its feedstock.
As BusinessDay reported on March 18, 2026, the facility imports about 30% of its crude needs. The Nigerian National Petroleum Company Limited has struggled to meet its supply commitments. This forces Dangote to source from the international market, paying in US dollars.
The second factor is the foreign exchange rate. Every imported barrel requires conversion from naira to dollars. The Central Bank of Nigeria reported an official rate of N1,383.88 to the dollar as of March 26, 2026. The parallel market rate hovered above N1,750.
These two variables exist outside any local refinery’s control. The company sets its ex-depot price based on these real-time costs. “We are price takers, not price makers,” the spokesperson stated.
“The narrative that our refinery’s production will automatically guarantee cheap fuel is economically flawed. Our pricing is a direct function of crude cost, forex, and operating expenses. We are helpless against these macro forces.” – Dangote Industries Group spokesperson, March 2026 briefing.
The Crude Supply Puzzle
The original plan was simple: run on Nigerian crude. This would have insulated operations from global prices and forex demands. The reality in 2026 is different.
Data from the Nigerian Upstream Petroleum Regulatory Commission shows total crude production averaged 1.45 million barrels per day in the first quarter. The Dangote Refinery, at full capacity, can process 650,000 barrels per day. Do the math. If the refinery took its full capacity, it would consume almost 45% of the entire national output. That is politically and economically impossible.
The NNPC has commitments for the older Port Harcourt and Warri refineries, for export sales, and for other swap deals. It supplies Dangote with a fraction of its needs. As Premium Times noted in February 2026, NNPC officials acknowledge a supply shortfall.
So the refinery turns to the international market. It buys crude from the United States, Saudi Arabia, and elsewhere. These transactions happen in US dollars. The Energy Information Administration placed the global average at $82 per barrel for the first quarter.
This gap between expectation and reality anchors the pricing issue. Local production of fuel depends on imported raw material.


Forex, The Invisible Tax
Every Nigerian feels the pressure of the exchange rate. For an operation the size of the Dangote Refinery, the pressure is monumental. The company needs dollars for crude imports, spare parts, technical contracts, and loan repayments. The refinery was built with foreign currency debt.
The Central Bank of Nigeria has tried to unify the exchange rate windows. But liquidity in the official market remains a challenge for large corporates. Accessing sufficient dollars at the official rate is difficult. This pushes some demand to the parallel market.
This forex cost is baked into the final product price. When the naira weakens, the naira cost of imported crude rises. The refinery must recover this higher cost.
Wait, it gets more complex. The National Bureau of Statistics reported that importing mineral fuels creates major forex demand. The refinery’s operations, designed to reduce forex demand for fuel imports, now generate forex demand for crude imports. It’s a circular problem.
The Minister of Finance, Mr. Wale Edun, says improving domestic crude production and refining is the long-term solution. The trouble is, we are not there yet.
What Happened to the Subsidy Debate?
The government announced the end of the petrol subsidy on May 29, 2023. The policy aimed to eliminate a fiscal drain and let market forces decide prices. The Dangote Refinery was a cornerstone of this argument.
In practice, the market has only one direction: up. Without a subsidy, the price floats with international costs. The Dangote Refinery, as a commercial entity, has no mandate to sell at a loss.
Some analysts expected a strategic reserve or a price stabilization fund. No such mechanism exists in 2026. The Petroleum Products Pricing Regulatory Agency now functions purely as a data collector.
The subsidy removal transferred price risk from the government to the consumer. The refinery changes the source of the product, but not the pricing calculus tied to global markets. Citizens who anticipated relief now face a fully deregulated market. The price in Lagos or Kano is set in New York and Rotterdam.
The Other Refineries in the Room
Attention focuses on Dangote, but it is not the only refinery. The government-owned Port Harcourt Refining Company completed rehabilitation in late 2024. It has struggled with consistent production. The plant operates intermittently, often at a fraction of its 210,000 barrel per day capacity. In March 2026, it contributed roughly 5% of national PMS demand.
Sources at the Nigerian National Petroleum Company Limited say the old refinery faces recurrent technical faults. Its output is unreliable. The Warri and Kaduna refineries remain in various stages of attempted rehabilitation.
Several smaller modular refineries in the Niger Delta produce diesel. Their combined capacity is limited. They face the same crude sourcing and forex challenges.
This means Dangote Refinery dominates local supply. Its pricing sets the benchmark. Independent marketers add transport and margin costs, leading to higher prices inland. The promised competitive market has not materialized.
“The operational state of our public refineries is a national embarrassment. Until we have multiple, functioning streams of domestic production, the market will lack the competition needed for price moderation.” – Energy analyst quoted in The Guardian, March 10, 2026.


The Ripple Effect on Everything
High fuel prices act as a tax on every sector. Transport costs increase for food. The price of bread rises. Manufacturers running diesel generators face steeper power costs.
The National Bureau of Statistics recorded a 12.12% headline inflation rate for February 2026. But energy and transport costs stayed at 27.3%. The link is unmistakable.
Small businesses are squeezed hardest. A tailor in Aba or a phone charger in Kano operates on thin margins. A sustained increase in generator or transport costs erodes these margins completely.
The social contract is under strain. Citizens were told short-term pain would yield long-term gain. The gain feels distant. The pain at the pump is immediate.
Calls for government intervention grow louder. The government insists the deregulation path is irreversible.
Is There a Path to Lower Prices?
The solution requires fixing root causes. First, domestic crude oil production must rise. Higher output gives the NNPC more barrels for Dangote and other refiners. This reduces expensive imports. Results are slow.
Second, the foreign exchange market needs deeper liquidity. The Central Bank of Nigeria is pursuing higher remittances and foreign investment. A stable forex market would reduce a major cost uncertainty.
Third, the public refineries must achieve reliable operation. The Port Harcourt refinery needs to run consistently. This would create genuine competition. The government has missed several deadlines.
Fourth, policy must encourage other private investments. The current environment deters potential investors. Explicit rules for crude allocation and forex access are essential.
These are long-term structural fixes. They offer no relief for the motorist buying fuel tomorrow. The Dangote Refinery’s helplessness is a statement of this economic reality. It is infrastructure, not a policy tool.
What You Can Do Today
Track the data yourself. The Nigerian National Petroleum Company Limited publishes weekly crude figures. The Central Bank of Nigeria publishes exchange rates. The National Bureau of Statistics releases monthly inflation reports.
Monitor these primary sources. This removes speculation. When you see a report on production falling or the naira weakening, you can anticipate pressure on fuel prices.
Engage with the process. Public hearings happen at the National Assembly. Submissions from citizen groups carry weight. Advocate for transparency in crude oil sales.
Support local businesses that are adapting. The high cost of energy is accelerating investments in solar power. Patronizing these businesses helps build an alternative economy.
The situation is complex. Understanding the mechanics is the first step toward demanding accountability. The refinery is here. The question is how the nation builds a system around it that works.
The Dangote Refinery is a monumental achievement. Its existence has not altered the fundamental laws of economics. The refinery is helpless against global crude prices and a volatile currency.
Until the country fixes its production, its forex, and its policy coherence, the promise of affordable fuel will remain a promise. The pump price will continue to tell that story.
Fuel Price Hike: Nigerians Are Crying – Here’s Why Dangote Refinery Can’t Save You



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