By Dionne Searcey
Aliko Dangote, Africa’s richest man, has an ambitious vision for the continent’s most populous nation, but hurdles stand in his way.
The richest man in Africa works from a construction trailer in a dusty parking lot.
The billionaire, Aliko Dangote, said he once had multiple homes in several countries, a nightlife of fancy parties, a Rolls-Royce and a Ferrari. Then, roughly two decades ago, he got serious about industrialisation, he said.
Mr Dangote, now 68, said he sold the cars and the homes abroad and built sugar refineries. He bought a majority stake in a salt-refining company. He built cement factories, first across Nigeria, then in Senegal, Ethiopia, Tanzania and beyond. Then came fertiliser and polyurethane factories.
This work of proving the continent is capable of large-scale industrialisation done by one of its own was much more important to him than the life of luxury.
“Some of us,” he said, “need to rescue the country.”
Now, Mr Dangote’s latest achievement is finally up and running: a sprawling new refinery in Nigeria, a nation that for decades has exported the vast majority of its crude oil.
Long criticised as a monopolist in the industries he focuses on, the man whose grandfather made his fortune in peanut trading doesn’t want to stop with oil, or even with Nigeria. Mr Dangote wants to break into the steel industry, to spread electricity to more people, to build more ports, to industrialise all of Africa.
His role model for future expansion is the Indian multinational conglomerate Tata Group, which produces things like black tea and semiconductors.
His factories, he said, will also help curb joblessness amid Africa’s youth boom. In Nigeria, the most populous nation on the continent, 40 to 50 million people will need jobs by 2030, according to the World Bank.
Already, his refinery is producing 650,000 barrels of crude oil per day. Mr. Dangote says that output will be double in the next year.
He announced over the weekend plans to list shares in the refinery locally. But first, he needs to solve infrastructure problems and address corruption in the oil industry, both of which stand in the way of bringing enough of the nation’s ample supply to his refinery, he said.
Until then, his refinery, a labyrinthine behemoth on a campus about 45 miles from his company’s Lagos headquarters, has sometimes supplemented Nigerian crude with imports from the United States and other countries.
On a recent afternoon at his industrial campus, a fidgety Mr Dangote was seated at a long table in a trailer, ushering in his next appointment before the previous one was finished. There’s not a minute to spare while trying to conquer Nigeria’s biggest problems.
Mr Dangote dreams of a day when gasoline courses through his country’s veins so fluidly that no one has to endure the long lines that have plagued Nigeria, where gasoline deliveries are hobbled by bad roads and illicit sales.
Current and former colleagues use the same word to describe Mr Dangote: hard-working. Bucking traditional gender norms, he has given executive-level roles to his three children, all daughters.
Some of Mr Dangote’s indulgences come through in his work. He throws lavish company parties, where he gives away prizes like vehicles to top employees and top customers. Clips of him clapping and singing along to performers circulated online after the annual party for his cement business last month.
Mr Dangote, who is divorced, likes to spend time with his eight grandchildren, and says his idea of a vacation is doing “normal person” things, like going for a jog or window shopping at a mall.
For years, he would unwind after the workday by inviting friends to his house, a mini-mansion on Victoria Island in Lagos, replete with mahogany-colored pillars, an aquarium in the dining room, a pool and giant terraces. (He also owns a home in Kano and rents a home in Abuja.) But recently he decided to pare back his social life to a tight, weekends-only schedule from 4 p.m. to 10 p.m. on Saturdays and noon to 10 p.m. on Sundays, he said.
“Work and fancy life, they don’t go together,” Mr Dangote said. “So, we have to sacrifice to a point.”
His workday often continues at his home, where on a recent evening Mr. Dangote, in a gray caftan and pants with the Dangote Group logo on it, nestled in a brown leather couch pit in his living room. A box of Rice Krispies was on a dining room table, and the TV was tuned to CNN. He nibbled dates as he met with workers who oversee operations for his three corporate jets.
Mr Dangote, whose fortune Forbes estimates at $26.2 billion, has built his empire on manufacturing the basics.
Unlike other multinational chief executives who are thinking about remaking their entire industries to support future innovations, he said he is focused on the tasks before him, skeptical of some newfangled technology. He compared the hype around artificial intelligence to the cheerleading surrounding the release of the first Nokia phones, which are becoming obsolete.
“This field is getting, you know, out of hand,” he said.
Nigerian anti-graft officials in 2023 accused Mr Dangote’s firm, along with 51 other companies, of receiving preferential foreign exchange rates from a former Central Bank chief. Mr. Dangote himself was not implicated, and his company has denied wrongdoing.
Critics complain Mr Dangote has a near-monopoly on many of the staples of life. Almost any construction site in the country is scattered with bags of Dangote-branded cement; grocery shelves are stocked with Dangote-branded flour and sugar. His wealth, critics say, was built on government subsidies and tax breaks.
Mr. Dangote insists he merely took advantage of what government officials offered, because he is building up the country.
“Nobody dared to do it, so we did it,” he said.
His chief example is his $20 billion refinery. The tax-subsidised zone where Mr. Dangote built the complex turned out to be swampland, something he did not know until construction started in 2016.
He pushed on, clearing the land and backfilling it with 65 million tons of sand. He imported 10,250 trucks from China after he couldn’t find a Nigerian firm with a big enough inventory, then built a jetty for ships to unload them, he said. He built a 23-mile, 10-lane expressway leading from the refinery to a port, using tax credits to finance the construction.
– Searcey is a Times reporter who writes about wealth and power in New York and beyond.
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