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Dangote mulls oil fields acquisitions

2 Min Read
Founder and Chief Executive of Dangote Group Aliko Dangote gestures during an interview with Reuters in his office in Lagos, in this June 13, 2012 file picture. Dangote has always liked making things to sell. As a child he boiled up sugar to make sweets he sold around town; these days he cooks up limestone in factories that produce millions of tonnes of cement. Dangote's entrepreneurial skills have helped make him Africa's richest person, with cement plants opened or under construction everywhere from Senegal to Ethiopia to South Africa. He dreams of owning the largest cement firm on the planet. By 2015, he hopes, his industrial conglomerate will be worth four times its current estimated $15 billion. To match Special Report NIGERIA-DANGOTE/ REUTERS/Akintunde Akinleye/Files (NIGERIA - Tags: BUSINESS)

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Dangote Group controlled by Africa’s richest man Aliko Dangote, is considering the purchase of Nigerian oil fields as international companies plan to sell onshore assets in the continent’s top crude producer.

The company, which has interests from cement to sugar, needs to secure a supply of crude oil and a “substantial amount of gas” for a $9 billion oil refinery and petrochemical complex it plans in southwest Nigeria, Group Executive Director Devakumar Edwin said in a Jan. 17 interview in Lagos, the country’s commercial capital. The company also needs energy for its cement plants in Africa’s second-largest economy, he said.

“We’re seriously thinking of investing in oil blocks both for gas and for oil,” Edwin said. “We’ve started talking with some companies who are divesting from onshore,” he said, declining to name them.

International oil and gas explorers including Shell Plc  and San Ramon, California-based Chevron Corp.  are selling onshore and shallow-water fields in Nigeria amid persistent violence and crude theft in the oil-rich Niger River Delta, with smaller Nigerian companies taking their place.

Dangote Group believes it can manage unrest and aggrieved communities in the region with corporate social initiatives, Edwin said.

“We know the terrain much better, we know the risks and we believe that the risks can be managed,” he said. “The primary risk is people blasting your pipelines. I wouldn’t like to go and invest in a block which is totally inland and then I have to start buying inland pipelines.”

Aliko Dangote, who is co-chairman of this year’s World Economic Forum in Davos, has seen his wealth climb $1.1 billion in the month to date, making him the world’s 27th richest person with a net worth estimated at $24.9 billion, according to the Bloomberg Billionaires’ Index.

 

 

via@Bloomberg

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