By Kikelomo Okere, Business Editor
The National Pension Commission has granted Pension Fund Administrators special approval to invest pension assets in the planned Initial Public Offering of Dangote Petroleum Refinery and Petrochemicals, signaling a major boost for Nigeria’s capital market and industrial expansion drive.
The approval allows PFAs to participate in the refinery’s upcoming IPO by waiving key investment eligibility requirements usually imposed under existing pension regulations, including conditions related to company existence, profitability, and dividend history.
In a circular signed by the Director of Surveillance, A.M. Saleem, PenCom said the decision followed a detailed assessment of the refinery’s strategic value and its expected impact on both the pension industry and the wider Nigerian economy.
The commission stated that the special dispensation was granted after considering the refinery’s strong fundamentals, long-term growth potential, and its significance to Nigeria’s energy security and economic transformation agenda.
PenCom also cited the track record of Aliko Dangote and the performance history of Dangote Industries Limited as part of the factors influencing the approval. Despite the waiver, the commission directed Pension Fund Administrators to maintain strict compliance with internal investment policies, risk management standards, and fiduciary responsibilities to contributors and retirees before committing funds to the offer.
The regulator emphasized that the approval remains a one-off intervention strictly tied to the Dangote refinery IPO and does not establish an automatic precedent for future public offers or investment transactions in the pension industry.
The planned listing is expected to attract massive investor interest as the 650,000 barrels-per-day refinery continues to strengthen its position in Nigeria’s downstream petroleum market amid rising global crude prices and growing domestic fuel demand.
With the refinery targeting a valuation of 50 billion dollars ahead of its proposed multi-exchange African listing later this year, analysts say the move could reshape regional capital markets, deepen investor participation across Africa, and mark a historic milestone for Nigeria’s industrial sector

