Industry
Kogi govt invades Dangote Cement plant, MAN urges FG to intervane
The Manufacturers Association of Nigeria MAN, on has urged the Federal Government to take urgent steps to amicably resolve the dispute between Dangote Cement PLC Plant, Obajana and the Kogi Government over land ownership. Mr Mansur Ahmed, the MAN President, made the plea while briefing newsmen in Lagos, on the association’s 50th Annual General Meeting with the theme: “An Agenda for Nigeria’s Industrialisation for the Next Decade”. The News Agency of Nigeria reports that the Dangote Cement Factory, Obajana, was on Wednesday sealed by some indigenes over alleged questionable circumstances surrounding the acquisition of the company. The Kogi State House of Assembly had ordered the closure of the company after its investigation into the Cement factory’s operation allegedly revealed that no valid acquisition took place for the company. The management of Dangote Cement had claimed that no fewer than seven of its staff members were shot and several others injured by the over 500 armed members of the state’s security outfit, the Vigilantes, that stormed the cement factory.
Ahmed described the development as “worrisome and unnecessary use of strong-arm tactics”. According to him, the action taken by the state government was illegitimate and could have been appropriately addressed, using legal means. “The development is very worrisome that a government should take measures like that to shutdown a plant that provides jobs and economic activities of large numbers of people in the state. The appropriate thing to do is to take the company to court, because this action is illegal and won’t happen in any normally managed economic situation. There are ways of resolving amicably and not to use strong-arm tactics. We hope the Federal Government will intervene so that such an issue is not repeated,” he said. Ahmed also urged the government to reconsider its position on increasing excise duty on nonalcoholic and other beverages. He said that the situation was detrimental to manufacturing competitiveness in the face of inflation. “Increasing excise duty would on compound the inflation situation as you do not increase tax when the economy is contracting.
“In raising new revenue, you need to be sure that you don’t undermine the revenue process itself by putting so much pressure on those paying taxes. Excise duty would increase cost significantly and given the current inflation situation, it’s not worth it,” he said. On the association’s theme at the 50th AGM, the MAN president said it was borne out of the need to take stock of the nation’s journey to industrialisation. Ahmed said the event would also ascertain the pains and pain-points; to highlight the performance limiters; recognise the gains and growth milestones and to identify the learning curves and hurdles ahead. He said that all these would craft a robust agenda for resetting industrialisation, albeit manufacturing in Nigeria. The significance of an electioneering year further propels us to bring to the consciousness of aspiring leaders of the nation the importance of a virile manufacturing sector. Over the years, the performance of the manufacturing sector has been constrained by numerous familiar challenges that are clearly espoused in our numerous presentations and submissions to the government. It is indeed a matter of great concern to our members that even, as our economy continue to experience very slow growth, our policy makers at all levels continue to compound the situation by introducing new taxes, further worsening the difficult and high-cost operating environment. In some climes, when the economy slows down, government reduce taxes to encourage businesses to expand, create more jobs and increase economic activities. What we are seeing in Nigeria today is not only increasing tax rate, but introducing new taxes and turning every public agency into a revenue collector. In the midst of the challenges, we are resilient and soldier on with our advocacy for a conducive atmosphere for the operation of manufacturing business in Nigeria.
“We continue to work toward ensuring that Nigeria becomes an environment that promotes competitiveness,” he said. Ahmed said that Alhaji Aliko Dangote, President, Dangote Group, would be the Guest Speaker at the event. He added that President Muhammadu Buhari and Otunba Niyi Adebayo, Minister for Industry, Trade and Investment would be the Special Guest and Guest of honour respectively. “The programme will, as usual, run for three days from Oct. 17 to Oct. 19 at the Lagos Oriental Hotel, Victoria Island. The background of the current manufacturing situation informed our choice of our distinguished Guest Speaker, who in his own right, has seen it all in manufacturing and can better point the way forward for the country’s leadership. He is also able to lead other members in charting a new course for the manufacturing sector. The speaker is an experienced industrialists, who speaks the language of Nigerian manufacturers and have had his own share of immense successes in Nigeria and Africa,” he said.
Industry
Dangote contracts Honeywell International for major refinery capacity upgrade to 1.4m barrels per day
Dangote Group is pleased to announce that it has entered a strategic partnership with Honeywell International Inc to support the next phase of expansion of the Dangote Petroleum Refinery. This collaboration will provide advanced technology and services that will enable the refinery to increase its processing capacity to 1.4 million barrels per day by 2028, marking a major milestone in our long-term vision to build the world’s largest petroleum refining complex. Through this agreement, Honeywell will supply specialised catalysts, equipment, and process technologies that will allow the refinery to process a broader slate of crude grades efficiently and to further enhance product quality and operational reliability.
Honeywell, a global Fortune 100 industrial and technology company, offers a wide portfolio of solutions across aviation, automotive, industrial automation, and advanced materials. Honeywell’s division UOP has been a technology partner to Dangote since 2017, providing proprietary refining systems, catalyst regeneration equipment, high performance column trays, and heat exchanger technologies that support our best-in-class operations.
Dangote Group is also advancing its petrochemical footprint. As part of the wider collaboration, we are scaling our polypropylene capacity to 2.4 million metric tons annually using Honeywell’s Oleflex technology. Polypropylene is a key industrial material widely used across packaging, manufacturing, and automotive applications. In addition to refining expansion, Dangote Group is progressing with the next phase of its fertiliser growth plan in Nigeria. We will increase our urea production capacity from 3 million metric tons to 9 million metric tons annually.
The existing plant consists of two trains of 1.5 million metric tons each. The expansion will add four additional trains to meet growing demand for high-quality fertiliser across Africa and global markets. Dangote Group remains fully committed to delivering world-class industrial capacity, strengthening Nigeria’s energy security, and driving sustainable economic growth through long-term investment, innovation, and strategic global partnerships.
Industry
Toyota, Honda turn India into car production hub away from China
Toyota, Honda, and Suzuki are spending billions of dollars to build new cars and factories in India, a sign of the country’s growing importance as a manufacturing hub as Japanese automakers redraw global supply chains to reduce dependence on China. Leo, the world’s largest carmaker, and Suzuki, the leader in the Indian market with almost a 40 per cent share, have separately announced investments totalling $11 billion to beef up manufacturing and export capabilities in the world’s third-largest auto market. Honda announced last week that it will establish India as a production and export base for one of its planned electric vehicles.
India’s low costs and vast labour pool have long been an attraction for manufacturers. Now, Japanese automakers are stepping up their operations as they pivot away from China, both as a market and a manufacturing base, according to multiple industry executives. India remains all but closed to Chinese EVs, so Japan’s carmakers – at least for now – will not face bruising competition from BYD and others there.
A brutal price war among Chinese EV makers has made it difficult for them to turn a profit. Adding to the pain, Chinese carmakers are now expanding overseas and snatching market share from Japanese rivals in Southeast Asia. “India is a good choice as a replacement market for China,” said Julie Boote, autos analyst at Pelham Smithers Associates in London, citing low profit margins in China. For the time being, the Japanese think it’s a much better market because they don’t have to deal with the Chinese competitors.” Other draws include the improved quality of India’s manufactured goods and incentives from Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s government, according to the executives.
Toyota and Suzuki each have majority ownership of their Indian units. Honda owns 100% of its business there. Japan’s annual direct investment in the Indian transport sector, which includes automakers, jumped more than sevenfold between 2021 and 2024, reaching 294 billion yen (about $2 billion) last year.
As Japanese automakers revved up investment in India, they cooled on China: direct investment in China’s transport sector saw an 83 per cent decrease over the same period, to 46 billion yen last year. Toyota is collaborating with Japanese and Indian vendors to reduce costs and increase production of hybrid components. India is one market where a tight supply of hybrid parts has been observed amid a surge in demand this year. It has localised its offerings, said an executive at a major Toyota supplier.
The Japanese automaker plans to launch 15 new and refreshed models in India by the end of the decade and deepen its rural network, Reuters reported last week. It aims to capture 10 per cent of the passenger car market by the end of the decade, up from its current eight percent share. “The Indian market is extremely important and is set to grow in the future,” Toyota president Koji Sato told reporters at last week’s Japan Mobility Show, noting many other automakers were also paying attention to the market.
Last year, Toyota announced more than $3 billion in investment to expand production at its existing factory in southern India by about 100,000 vehicles per year and build a new plant in western Maharashtra state, which is expected to begin production before 2030. That is expected to take Toyota’s Indian production capacity to more than one million vehicles. At its quarterly earnings on Wednesday, the automaker highlighted the growing importance of India to its profits, particularly as the North American business has been impacted by tariffs. India’s economic growth has averaged eight per cent over the past three fiscal years, a surge that Mr Modi’s government wants to sustain by luring more foreign manufacturers.
It is rolling out incentives to get them to produce goods for both domestic and global markets. India manufactured about five million passenger cars during the last financial year, of which almost 800,000 were exported, and the remainder were sold in the domestic market. Domestic sales grew about 2 per cent from a year ago, while exports rose 15 per cent. Government limits on Chinese investment are effectively another form of assistance, making it difficult for new Chinese carmakers to enter and for existing ones, such as SAIC’s MG Motor and BYD. “India’s protectionist stance toward neighbouring countries is a blessing in disguise for Japanese carmakers,” said S&P Global Mobility’s Gaurav Vangaal. “Because of this, they see an opportunity to expand investment in India, enhancing their cost competitiveness against domestic players.”
Local companies Tata Motors and Mahindra & Mahindra have been expanding their offerings with SUVs, taking market share from Suzuki. Before the pandemic, Suzuki held about 50 per cent of the passenger car market. India is never an easy market. Foreign automakers such as Ford and General Motors previously struggled there and eventually exited.
For Honda, India is the largest market for its highly profitable two-wheeler business, and it now intends to expand its four-wheeler business, chief executive Toshihiro Mibe told the mobility show.
Honda said its top three focus markets for the car business are the United States, followed by India and Japan. It plans to make India the production and export base for one of its ‘Zero series’ electric cars, with one model to be exported to Japan and other Asian markets from 2027. Suzuki’s $8 billion investment in India is primarily aimed at expanding its local production capacity to four million cars per year, from the current 2.5 million. Its Indian business, Maruti Suzuki, is the country’s top-selling carmaker and largest car exporter.
“We would like to grow India as Suzuki’s global production hub,” president Toshihiro Suzuki told reporters on the sidelines of the mobility show. “We would like to enhance exports from India.” (Reuters/NAN)
Industry
FG, states wasting Nigeria’s money on imported vehicles, neglecting local manufacturers—Senator Fadahunsi
Francis Fadahunsi, chairman of the Senate Committee on Industry, has expressed dismay over the low patronage of made-in-Nigeria automobiles by the federal and state governments.
Mr Fadahunsi made the observation during the committee members’ visit to Anambra Motor Manufacturing Company (ANAMMCO) in Enugu on Friday. The chairman said they discovered that a lot of potential was being wasted at Innoson Motors and ANAMMCO due to a lack of patronage from the federal and state governments.
“If the federal and state governments are patronising our indigenous vehicle assemblers, manufacturers, and CNG buses, Nigeria will be a better place instead of wasting our money and foreign resources to import vehicles. What we have seen in Enugu and Anambra is in line with the president’s New Hope Agenda. There are no types of buses that the government is looking for that these local assemblers and manufacturers cannot produce,” Mr Fadahunsi said. The senator said indigenous vehicle assemblers and manufacturers need legal backing and funds from the federal government.
He called on ministries, departments, and agencies to patronise made-in-Nigeria vehicles, adding that by doing so, they would be reinvesting in the economy and creating jobs for unemployed youths. Mr Fadahunsi also said the Senate committee would convince their colleagues to start patronising vehicles produced in Nigeria and assist in enacting bills to make them thrive.
Oluwemimo Osanipin, the director-general of the National Automotive Design and Development Council (NADDC), commended the committee for its oversight function, adding that the automobile sector had the capacity to generate a lot of multiplier effects in the economy.
He tasked governments with policies that would encourage the purchase of locally manufactured goods and stimulate demand, which also allowed individuals to buy. Mr Osanipin added that the committee’s visit would offer them the opportunity to identify the challenges of auto operators and areas needing support. The chief operating officer of ANAMMCO, Bennett Ejindu, described the visit as a “positive development,” saying it underscored the importance the President Bola Tinubu administration and Senate attached to industrial development.
Mr. Ejindu recalled that ANAMMCO was established in the 1970s, and that the industry’s abandonment between 1970 and 1986 led the world to believe that Nigeria was not serious about developing the automotive industry. The operating officer added that governments could also assist in revitalise the industry through direct involvement and the creation of an enabling environment for the industry to thrive. NAN
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