Aliko Dangote arranges $4.5b of financing for oil refinery
Africa's richest man, Aliko Dangote, has arranged more than $4.5 billion in debt financing for his Nigerian oil refinery project and aims to start production in early 2020, he told Reuters.
Despite being a crude oil exporter, Nigeria imports the bulk of its petroleum because of a lack of domestic refining capacity.
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Lenders would commit about $3.15 billion, with the World Bank's private sector arm providing $150 million, Dangote said, adding that he was investing more than 60
Dangote Group has said that Standard Chartered Bank was arranging funds for the project.
"We will end up spending between $12 billion to $14 billion. The funding is going to come through equity, commercial bank loans, export credit agencies and developmental banks," Dangote said in an interview in Lagos on Tuesday.
"Hopefully, we will finish mechanical (construction) by next year and products will start coming out in the first quarter of 2020."
Nigeria's central bank would provide guarantees for about 575 billion
The planned refinery and petrochemical complex is expected to account for half of Dangote's sprawling assets when it is finished next year.
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Last week Dangote signed a loan of $650 million with the African Export-Import Bank (Afreximbank) for the project.
Dangote said he was looking to acquire more oilfields as his focus shift towards the oil sector to feed the refinery.
Outside of oil, Dangote said he is also eyeing English soccer team Arsenal.
"We will go after Arsenal from 2020 ... even if somebody buys, we will still go after it," he told Reuters, referring to reports that Russian billionaire Alisher Usmanov was looking to sell his 30
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Dangote added that the need for healthy cash flow until completion of the refinery project rules out a move for Arsenal before then.