HomeBusinessDangote seals gas deal with China's GCL for Ethiopia plant

Dangote seals gas deal with China’s GCL for Ethiopia plant

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KEY POINTS


  • Dangote and GCL Group sign a $4.2 billion, 25-year natural gas supply agreement in Lagos.
  • The $2.5 billion Ethiopian fertilizer plant targets 3 million tonnes of urea annually from 2029.
  • Gas will flow from Ethiopia’s Calub field via a dedicated 108-kilometre pipeline to the plant.

Aliko Dangote has signed one of the most consequential deals of his industrial career, agreeing with China’s GCL Group on a $4.2 billion, 25-year natural gas supply contract to power a $2.5 billion fertilizer complex in Ethiopia that will reshape how East Africa feeds itself.

The Dangote Ethiopia fertilizer deal, formalised in Lagos between Dangote Industries Limited and GCL Group, covers the supply of natural gas to a 3-million-tonne-per-year urea production facility in Gode, in Ethiopia’s Somali Region. The plant targets a 2029 launch date and will operate under a 60:40 equity structure between Dangote Group and Ethiopian Investment Holdings.

Gas will travel from the Calub Gas Field in Ethiopia’s Ogaden Basin through a dedicated 108-kilometre pipeline directly to the fertilizer complex. Once operational, the facility will cover Ethiopia’s entire current urea import requirement and supply neighbouring regional markets, effectively ending East Africa’s dependence on imported fertilizer at scale.

Dangote’s argument for African industrial autonomy

Dangote framed the Dangote Ethiopia fertilizer deal in terms that go beyond a single project. Africa, while he argued, cannot sustain a model built on exporting raw materials while importing finished products.

“We must pursue a new path of highly autonomous development. Furthermore, through seamless integration and strategic cooperation with GCL, we will achieve an efficient closed-loop value chain from natural gas extraction to fertilizer production, taking a crucial step toward enabling Africa to secure greater autonomy over its food security,” he said.

GCL’s long game in Ethiopia

GCL Group’s chairman Zhu Gongshan said the partnership built on more than two decades of the Chinese conglomerate’s presence in Ethiopia, where it has moved from oil and gas exploration to constructing the country’s first natural gas liquefaction project. He described the new arrangement as a transition from a model of Chinese companies operating abroad toward a mutually beneficial ecosystem.

GCL’s integrated upstream, midstream, and downstream operations in Ethiopia, combined with Dangote Group’s industrial reach across Africa, further give the partnership the kind of vertical integration that analysts say distinguishes it from more conventional foreign investment plays on the continent.

In addition, industry analysts point to the project’s broader significance: thousands of direct and indirect jobs in the Somali Region, infrastructure development along the pipeline corridor, and a natural gas-based production pathway that aligns with global pressure on energy-intensive industries to reduce carbon intensity. The Ethiopian government, credited by both parties as essential to making the deal possible, also gains a domestic fertilizer supply chain that removes a chronic agricultural vulnerability.

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