Africa Finance Corporation (AFC) has approved a US$600 million facility to Greenview Fertiliser Corp., Dangote’s fertiliser holding company, as a cornerstone commitment to the expansion programme. The plan will triple urea fertiliser capacity in Nigeria from 3 million to 9 million tonnes per year, while adding a new 3 million tonnes per year plant in Ethiopia.
The initiative positions Dangote Group as operator of what AFC describes as the world’s largest fertiliser platform. For investors, it anchors a scalable platform play in fertiliser and agribusiness inputs, underwritten by a seasoned regional development finance institution.
The transaction builds on a long-standing relationship. AFC previously served as Co-Coordinating Bank on a US$3 billion syndicated loan for the Dangote Refinery, one of Africa’s largest industrial projects. It also advanced a US$300 million senior term loan to Dangote Industries Limited at an earlier stage of the refinery’s development. That loan has now been fully repaid. AFC is now redeploying that capital, at double the original ticket size, into the fertiliser push.
This recycling illustrates AFC’s operating model: provide early-stage, higher-risk capital to large industrial projects, exit once assets reach stable, cash-generative operations, then reinvest into the next wave of systemic infrastructure. In this case, capital is shifting from downstream fuels into upstream agricultural inputs. This aligns with structural demand for food, jobs and value-added use of natural gas.
For Dangote, the facility deepens access to long-term, hard-currency funding alongside its own balance sheet. Group President and Chief Executive Aliko Dangote said the investment marks the next phase of Dangote Fertilizer’s growth, strengthening food security, productivity and Africa’s industrial base.
AFC frames the Dangote fertiliser expansion squarely within Africa’s food security challenge. The continent’s population is projected to reach 2.5 billion by 2050. Yet current urea consumption is about 6 million tonnes a year for 1.5 billion people. By comparison, India consumes about 40 million tonnes, while China consumes around 50 million tonnes, with similar population sizes. The usage gap points to under-fertilised soils and depressed yields.
Despite holding some of the world’s largest natural gas reserves and roughly a quarter of uncultivated arable land, Africa remains a net importer of fertiliser. Recent disruptions to global supply chains and commodities have exposed the risk of dependence on imported inputs. Expanded domestic production, if competitively priced, could reduce vulnerability to external shocks. It could also anchor regional value chains in gas, petrochemicals and agriculture.
The Nigerian expansion to 9 million tonnes per year of urea, plus the 3 million tonnes per year Ethiopian platform, is expected to support regional food security, lift farm productivity and cut import reliance. It should also strengthen Africa’s position as a fertiliser supplier to international markets, creating a potential export corridor from West and East Africa.
AFC President and Chief Executive Samaila Zubairu framed the question directly: how Africa will feed 2.5 billion people by mid-century. He argued that closing the productivity gap is essential to Africa’s food security. He described the partnership with Dangote as building the foundation for the continent to feed itself, create productive jobs and strengthen economic sovereignty.
For investors, the deal underscores three trends. First, fertiliser and broader food-security value chains are moving to the centre of Africa’s infrastructure story, with development finance institutions ready to anchor large-ticket financings. Second, gas-based industrialisation is shifting from fuels to higher-value petrochemicals and inputs. Third, strong sponsors with proven delivery records, such as Dangote Group, can attract repeat institutional capital at scale.
The next milestones to watch include financial close on the full US$7 billion programme, execution progress in Ethiopia, and how quickly expanded capacity translates into regional distribution, pricing power and export volumes. For long-term investors, the Dangote fertiliser expansion may prove an early marker of Africa’s next major infrastructure theme: feeding a bigger continent with its own resources.
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