Africa’s oil market in 2026 sits at the intersection of scale and structural inefficiency.
- +Top 10 largest refineries in Africa 2026
The continent holds about 7–8% of global proven crude reserves, yet captures only a fraction of downstream value, largely because refining capacity has historically lagged production.
The continent holds about 7–8% of global proven crude reserves, yet captures only a fraction of downstream value, largely because refining capacity has historically lagged production. Total African refinery capacity is estimated at ~3.5–4.0 million barrels per day (bpd), but effective utilisation in many markets remains below 50%, creating one of the widest import dependency gaps globally.
This imbalance translates into a substantial revenue leakage. Africa spends an estimated $60–90 billion annually on petroleum product imports, even as it exports crude oil worth hundreds of billions of dollars.
The mismatch highlights a structural weakness: crude-rich economies remain fuel-import dependent due to ageing refineries, limited complexity, and chronic underinvestment in maintenance and upgrades.
At the same time, the opportunity set is expanding. Large-scale projects like Nigeria’s Dangote Refinery, Algeria’s integrated Sonatrach system, and Egypt’s expanding refining hubs are beginning to shift the downstream balance.
Demand fundamentals remain strong, with African petroleum consumption growing at roughly 2–3% annually, driven by urbanisation, transport demand, and industrial expansion.
This ranking of the Top 10 largest refineries in Africa in 2026 is therefore not just a list of barrels-per-day figures. It is a snapshot of industrial power, policy direction, and the continent’s gradual shift from import dependence to downstream self-sufficiency, still uneven, but unmistakably in motion.
Set along KM 16 Kachia Road in Kaduna, the Kaduna Refining and Petrochemical Company was built to anchor fuel supply across northern Nigeria. Commissioned in 1980 at 50,000 barrels a day, the complex expanded in stages through the 1980s, adding a second crude train for lubricants and lifting nameplate capacity to 110,000 barrels per day.
At its core are two crude distillation units: a fuels train upgraded to 60,000 barrels per day and a second, 50,000-barrel lube train that has struggled with utility constraints and is currently offline.
The refinery’s configuration reflects late-1970s engineering—leaner on energy use but increasingly dated against modern benchmarks. Supporting units span fluid catalytic cracking, hydrotreating, reforming and sulphur recovery, while a petrochemicals plant commissioned in 1988 produces linear alkyl benzene, a key detergent feedstock.
Despite its scale, output has persistently lagged capacity. Throughput averaged about 40,000 barrels per day in 2002, roughly 36% utilization and has rarely reached peak levels since early expansions.
Periodic shutdowns and infrastructure gaps have constrained operations, even as product slates range from gasoline and diesel to waxes, asphalt and petrochemicals. Following long-term inactivity, rehabilitation efforts are aimed at bringing the refinery back to 60% capacity.
