Dangote Refinery Sack: All Nigerian Workers Dismissed After Union Move

 


Dangote Petroleum Refinery exterior in Lagos, Nigeria, site of a mass worker termination and labor dispute.


The management of Dangote Petroleum Refinery has terminated the employment of all its Nigerian workers, a move that occurred less than a day after the majority of staff joined a key oil union . The union has vowed to force the company to reverse its decision.

The Petroleum and Natural Gas Senior Staff Association of Nigeria confirmed the development on Friday. PENGASSAN President Festus Osifo said the union received the termination notice late Wednesday night . He assured that the union would secure the workers' recall.

The decision was communicated through a memo dated September 25, 2025, and signed by Femi Adekunle, the Chief General Manager of Human Asset Management . The memo stated the action was part of a "total re-organisation" of the refinery. It cited "many recent cases of reported sabotage in different units" that led to major safety concerns as the reason for the reorganization .

The directive ordered affected staff to surrender all company property to their line managers. It also instructed the finance department to calculate their benefits and entitlements .

However, a senior official from the refinery denied that this constituted a mass sack. The official described it as a reorganisation exercise aimed at curbing acts of sabotage within the plant . The official argued that the interpretation of the memo had been misrepresented. They insisted the action was not related to union activities but was a necessary step to safeguard the facility . The official suggested that the workers could be reabsorbed after the issues were addressed .

The timing of the terminations has intensified a simmering conflict between the refinery and oil unions. The move comes just hours after reports indicated that about 90 percent of the Nigerian workers had joined PENGASSAN . This has led to accusations that the company's action is a response to the workers' unionization.

The Nigeria Union of Petroleum and Natural Gas Workers had recently declared a strike in solidarity with workers at the refinery. That strike was suspended after the federal government intervened . The refinery had previously secured a temporary injunction barring strikes by unions. That court order has since expired, raising concerns of fresh unrest in Nigeria's vital energy sector .

The Dangote Refinery is a landmark project for Nigeria. It started operations in 2024 with the goal of ending the country's long reliance on imported petroleum products . The 650,000 barrels-per-day facility is the largest of its kind in Africa. It has already begun to significantly reduce Nigeria's fuel imports . The current labor dispute introduces new challenges for the refinery. It faces operational turbulence and industrial disputes while trying to meet its production targets .

As of the time of reporting, a spokesperson for the Dangote Group had not responded to requests for comment . The situation remains fluid. The outcome of this dispute could have significant implications for labor relations within Nigeria's evolving oil and gas industry.


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