Local refiners are raising fresh concerns that crude meant for domestic processing is not consistently getting to their plants, creating a disconnect between policy and actual output.
Under the umbrella of the Crude Oil Refinery Owners Association of Nigeria, operators say allocations on paper are not translating into real supply on ground. The result is that refineries designed to process crude into petrol, diesel, and aviation fuel are running below capacity.
At the centre of the issue is a recurring gap. About 483,000 barrels per day may be earmarked for local refining, but only a portion of that volume is delivered. The rest is lost along the line to operational constraints, re-trading, and flexibility arrangements within the system. For refiners, that shortfall is not just a logistics problem. It directly affects output, revenue, and job creation.
The impact is already showing. Modular and mid-scale refineries that are operational are unable to run steadily because feedstock supply is unpredictable. That uncertainty is beginning to affect financing, as lenders are reluctant to back facilities that cannot guarantee consistent operations. It is also hitting workforce stability and host communities that depend on refinery activity.
There is also a pricing layer to the problem. Refiners argue that current crude pricing, tied largely to international benchmarks, does not reflect the realities of processing locally. Without a clearer and more predictable pricing structure, long-term planning becomes difficult, especially for smaller operators trying to scale.
Infrastructure remains another pressure point. Losses between production and delivery, pipeline constraints, and evacuation bottlenecks continue to disrupt supply chains. Even where private investments have been made in logistics, the broader system still struggles to move crude efficiently from fields to refineries.
Changes in the upstream space are adding to the tension. As international oil companies exit and indigenous producers take over, supply dynamics are shifting. Local producers, often focused on quicker revenue cycles, may not prioritise domestic refining in the same way, leaving regulators to balance export earnings with local energy needs.
Regulators, on their part, are pointing refiners toward longer-term solutions, including securing direct stakes in upstream assets or entering structured supply agreements with producers. The idea is to move away from reliance on allocations and toward more predictable, contract-based supply.
What is emerging is a deeper structural issue. Nigeria is trying to build a domestic refining base, but the supply chain feeding that ambition is still unstable. Until crude flows match allocations consistently, the country’s push to refine more at home will continue to run below its potential



