By Our Reporters
The Nigerian petroleum sector is once again gripped by uncertainty after the sudden and dramatic resignations of its two top regulators on Wednesday.
The heads of the Nigerian Midstream and Downstream Petroleum Regulatory Authority and the Nigerian Upstream Petroleum Regulatory Commission were forced out as a result of a brutal price war and an extraordinary public campaign waged by industrialist Aliko Dangote.
The exits mark the deepest crisis to hit the industry since the implementation of the Petroleum Industry Act and expose the raw tensions between the nation’s most powerful businessman and the state institutions meant to oversee him.
The crisis reached its breaking point over a whirlwind seventy-two hours. It began on Sunday with a stunning press conference at the sprawling Dangote Refinery in Lekki. There, Africa’s richest man launched a deeply personal and political attack on Farouk Ahmed, the chief executive of the NMDPRA. Dangote did not mince words, explicitly questioning the origins of Ahmed’s wealth.
His most incendiary claim was that the regulator had paid approximately five million dollars for the secondary school education of his four children at an institution in Switzerland. “I’ve actually had people making complaints about a regulator who has actually put his children in secondary school. And that secondary school education, which is six years, four of them cost Nigeria $5m,” Dangote declared to reporters, describing the allegation as symptomatic of a corrupt system undermining his enterprise.
By Tuesday, the rhetoric had hardened into formal action. The Dangote Group submitted a detailed petition to the Independent Corrupt Practices Commission, demanding a full-scale investigation into Ahmed’s finances and the eye-watering educational payments. This move transformed a commercial dispute into a high-stakes corruption allegation, creating a political conflagration that demanded a response from the Presidency.
That response came swiftly. On Wednesday morning, Ahmed was summoned to the Presidential Villa in Abuja. Shortly after, the resignation of both Ahmed and Gbenga Komolafe of the NUPRC was announced, with President Bola Tinubu immediately nominating two seasoned industry replacements for Senate confirmation.
While the $5 million school fee claim provided the explosive final act, the conflict has been simmering for over a year, rooted in a fundamental clash over market control. Since the Dangote Refinery began producing diesel and later petrol, it has been locked in a battle with the NMDPRA over the continued issuance of licenses for fuel imports.
Dangote’s executives have consistently accused the authority of deliberately flooding the market with imported fuels to stifle the refinery’s output, a practice they label as economic sabotage. Ahmed, in a defense that now seems fateful, argued that relying on a single refinery threatened national energy security. He further inflamed tensions earlier this year by publicly suggesting, to widespread skepticism, that Dangote’s diesel was of inferior quality compared to imported grades.
The dispute escalated from words to a punishing price war. In a bid to assert absolute market dominance, the Dangote Refinery began an aggressive series of price cuts, slashing the pump price of petrol from over 1,100 naira per litre to a staggering 699 naira. This predatory pricing strategy, as described by struggling competitors, was designed to choke off other players. It was against this backdrop of commercial combat that Dangote made his personal allegations, accusing Ahmed of issuing “reckless” import licenses for 2026 despite the refinery’s guaranteed supply.
The inclusion of Komolafe in the regulatory exodus points to the broader dimensions of the feud. The Dangote Group had also long been frustrated with the NUPRC, alleging it failed to adequately enforce rules guaranteeing domestic crude oil supply to local refiners. This, they claimed, forced the refinery to import more expensive crude from the United States at times, despite Nigeria’s vast reserves, adding unnecessary cost and complexity to their operations.
The sudden vacuum at the top of both regulatory agencies has sent a wave of anxiety through an already reeling downstream sector.
President Tinubu has nominated Oritsemeyiwa Eyesan, a former NNPC upstream executive, to head the NUPRC, and engineer Saidu Aliyu Mohammed, a former head of the Kaduna refinery, to lead the NMDPRA. While the administration moves to project control, the underlying crisis remains entirely unresolved. The central dilemma—how to manage the nation’s relationship with a monolithic, privately-owned refinery that seeks to dominate the market, while ensuring fair competition and genuine energy security—now lands squarely on the desks of the incoming chiefs.
Civil society groups are already insisting that the resignations must not be the end of the affair. “Resignation should not be the end of the story,” said Auwal Rafsanjani of the Civil Society Legislative Advocacy Centre, urging the ICPC to proceed with a thorough investigation into the serious allegations made.


































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