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TICGL | Economic Consulting Group
Why Did Dangote Choose Kenya Over Tanzania for Its $20 Billion Refinery? | TICGL
TICGL / TERI · Investment Research Note · July 2026

Why Did Dangote Choose Kenya Over Tanzania for Its $20 Billion Refinery — And What Does It Mean for Investors?

Dangote Industries has confirmed its 700,000 bpd, USD 15-20 billion East African refinery will rise at Lamu, Kenya — not Tanga, Tanzania. TICGL unpacks the diplomatic misstep, the deeper structural gaps behind it, and the parallel power, fertiliser and port pipeline Tanzania just secured instead.

Prepared by: TICGL Research Division Author: Amran Bhuzohera, Managing Director & Chief Economist Published: July 2026

Executive Summary

The headline number, the headline decision, and why TICGL says this was never really about diplomacy alone.

700,000
barrels/day refinery capacity
$15-20bn
estimated investment size
Lamu, Kenya
final chosen site
~15%
Tanzania's 2025 FDI realisation rate

Dangote Industries Limited has confirmed that its planned 700,000-barrel-per-day East African refinery — the group's largest refining investment outside Nigeria — will be sited at Lamu, Kenya, rather than Tanga, Tanzania. Company officials told Reuters that the site has been selected, soil tests are under way, and design and engineering work has commenced, with financing to be drawn from internal cash flow, bonds and a planned initial public offering.

The decision followed a diplomatic misstep rather than a straightforward least-cost analysis: Kenya's President William Ruto announced at a Nairobi summit that the refinery would be built at Tanga before Tanzania's government had approved the plan, prompting President Samia Suluhu Hassan to publicly disown it. Dangote then pivoted toward Mombasa and, subsequently, Lamu — citing superior port depth, larger fuel consumption, and a bigger economy as the deciding commercial factors.

TICGL's core reading: the diplomatic friction was the proximate trigger, but the underlying decision was shaped by structural investment-climate variables TICGL has tracked for years — a narrow tax base, a manufacturing sector stuck near 8% of GDP, a private sector crowded out by government borrowing, an FDI pipeline that converts pledges into disbursed capital at only 15-20%, and permitting/land-acquisition delays averaging 18-24 months.

This is not the end of the Tanzania–Dangote relationship. On 29 June 2026, President Samia met Aliko Dangote at State House in Dar es Salaam and secured commitment to a parallel investment pipeline — a 2,000 MW coal-fired power plant, a urea fertiliser complex, port development, a 40-km port-access road, and an 812-km Mtwara–Mbamba Bay transport corridor — alongside an open invitation for Tanzania to take an equity stake in the Lamu refinery itself. TICGL reads this as evidence that Tanzania remains commercially attractive, but converting interest into disbursed capital still depends on closing the systemic gaps set out below.

1. Background: How the Refinery Decision Unfolded

1.1 Timeline — from the Nairobi announcement to the confirmed Lamu site.

23 APRIL 2026

At a Nairobi summit, Aliko Dangote pledges a 650,000 bpd East African refinery. Kenya's President Ruto publicly names Tanga, Tanzania as the site, citing the EACOP pipeline route — without prior sign-off from Dodoma.

LATE APRIL 2026

President Samia Suluhu Hassan clarifies her government had not approved a Tanga refinery plan, creating diplomatic friction between Dar es Salaam and Nairobi.

MAY 2026

Dangote pivots publicly toward Mombasa, citing greater port depth, higher domestic fuel consumption, and the larger Kenyan economy. Kenya's National Infrastructure Fund pledges co-investment, with roughly KSh 21.5 billion in seed capital earmarked.

MAY–JUNE 2026

Feasibility studies formally cover three candidate ports — Tanga, Mombasa and Lamu — with Lamu emerging as preferred, in part to serve South Sudan and Ethiopia via the LAPSSET corridor.

29 JUNE 2026

Dangote meets President Samia at State House, Dar es Salaam, confirming the refinery's move to Lamu while unveiling a parallel, non-refinery investment pipeline for Tanzania.

1–7 JULY 2026

Dangote Industries confirms the refinery's capacity at 700,000 bpd and discloses financing via internal cash flow, bonds and a planned IPO, with construction timelines of up to three years.

1.2 Why Kenya Won on Dangote's Own Stated Terms

Four factors recur consistently across reporting on the decision.

Factor Dangote citedKenya / Lamu advantageTanzania / Tanga position
Port depth & scaleMombasa handles 45m+ tonnes/year, Africa's largest & deepest regional portComparatively shallower, smaller facility at Tanga
Market sizeLarger population, higher per-capita fuel consumption, bigger economySmaller anchor demand base
Government co-investmentKenya's National Infrastructure Fund pledged direct equity & de-risking (~KSh 21.5bn seed)No equivalent co-investment vehicle activated in time
Corridor accessLamu sits on LAPSSET, opening South Sudan & Ethiopia marketsTanga cannot easily reach these markets
Pipeline proximity (EACOP)Dangote stated crude can arrive by ship, reducing pipeline-terminus dependenceAssumed EACOP-hosting advantage did not materialise as decisive

Mombasa vs Tanga: Port Throughput Gap

Illustrative comparison of annual port cargo throughput cited as a deciding commercial factor (million tonnes/year).

1.3 The Emerging Tanzania Consolation Package

Rather than walking away, Dangote used the 29 June meeting to lay out a considerably broader pipeline of Tanzania-based investments than the group's existing USD 500 million, 3-million-tonne cement plant in Mtwara.

ComponentScale / detail
Coal-fired power plant2,000 MW — a potentially transformative addition against Tanzania's current ~4,522 MW installed capacity
Urea fertiliser complexExtends Dangote's African fertiliser strategy into a market still heavily import-dependent for fertiliser
Port development + access road40-km concrete access road to relieve congestion around Tanzania's principal ports
Transport corridor812-km Mtwara–Mbamba Bay corridor to move raw materials and finished goods more efficiently
Special economic zoneProposed trade/economic zone tied to the pipeline
Lamu refinery equity stakeOpen invitation for the Tanzanian government to acquire equity in the Lamu refinery itself
Not yet at financial close. President Samia has directed the Minister of Planning and Investment, Prof. Kitila Mkumbo, to coordinate technical negotiations. On TICGL's registration-to-disbursement framework, the conversion of this pipeline into disbursed capital — not the announcement itself — will be the true test of Tanzania's investment climate.

2. Systemic Investment-Climate Challenges — the TICGL Lens

TICGL's ongoing Dira 2050 policy-gap research and FDI registration-to-disbursement analysis identify recurring structural constraints that shape how large investors like Dangote evaluate Tanzania against regional peers.

2.1 A Narrow, Shallow Tax Base

Tanzania's tax-to-GDP ratio stands at approximately 13.1%, below the Sub-Saharan Africa average of roughly 16% and well short of the 18-20% associated with sustainable middle-income economies. Corporate income tax of approximately 30% sits above Kenya's 25% and Rwanda's 28%, while compliance remains time-intensive relative to regional peers. VAT refund arrears — estimated at TZS 1.4-1.5 trillion — further strain working capital for capital-intensive investors.

Tax-to-GDP Ratio: Tanzania vs Regional Benchmarks

Tanzania trails the Sub-Saharan Africa average and the 18-20% band typical of sustainable middle-income economies.

TICGL recommendation: broaden the base by formalising the informal economy rather than raising rates on existing formal taxpayers, alongside automation of tax administration.

2.2 An Industrialisation and Infrastructure Deficit

Manufacturing contributes only about 8.1% of GDP, against a 22-28% range typically associated with a USD 1 trillion-scale economy under Tanzania's Dira 2050 ambition. Installed power capacity of roughly 4,522 MW remains far below the 15,000 MW envisioned for 2050. In the specific case of the refinery, Tanga's comparatively shallow port and smaller throughput capacity versus Mombasa's scale was cited directly by Dangote as a deciding factor.

Manufacturing Share of GDP

Current vs the range required for Dira 2050's $1 trillion ambition

Installed Power Capacity (MW)

Current capacity vs the 2050 target

2.3 Private-Sector Crowding-Out

Government domestic borrowing continues to compete directly with private credit: treasury bills and bonds offer risk-free yields of 8-12%, discouraging commercial banks from lending to manufacturing and infrastructure SMEs. Private investment remains near 22% of GDP, short of the 30-35% TICGL estimates is required to sustain 8%+ growth. As of TICGL's most recent PPP tracking, no PPP project has yet reached financial close, even though a PPP policy framework exists on paper.

Private Investment as % of GDP: Actual vs Required

Tanzania's private investment share sits well below the 30-35% band needed to sustain 8%+ growth.

2.4 The FDI Registration-to-Disbursement Gap

Tanzania's highest-leverage, most actionable investment-climate constraint.

Tanzania's approved FDI pipeline has grown five-fold over a decade, from USD 2.1 billion (2015) to USD 10.95 billion (2025), yet the realisation rate — actual disbursed inflows divided by registered pledges — has fallen from roughly 73% in 2015 to an estimated 15% in 2025, the lowest point in an eleven-year series. The resulting annual disbursement gap has widened to approximately USD 9.3 billion.

Registered FDI Pipeline vs Actual Inflows (USD Billion)

The widening gap between what Tanzania approves and what actually gets disbursed, 2015-2025.

FDI Realisation Rate Trend

Share of registered/approved FDI pledges that convert into actual disbursed capital.

IndicatorTanzania (2025)Regional benchmark
Registered FDI pipelineUSD 10.95bnFive-fold growth since 2015
Actual FDI inflows~USD 1.66-1.72bnGrew only ~8% in real terms since 2015
Realisation rate~15%Mature peer economies: 45-65%
Avg. investment approval time~240 daysRwanda: ~28 days; Kenya: ~90 days
World Bank B-READY score (2024)52.1Rwanda: 72.6; Kenya: 58.8; Ethiopia: 54.3

Six Structural Drivers of the Gap

Ranked by estimated share of the shortfall: land acquisition and title-deed issuance (≈28%, typically 18-24 months to complete); multi-agency regulatory approvals across an average of seven agencies (≈22%); foreign-exchange availability and repatriation uncertainty (≈18%); infrastructure gaps in power, roads and port connectivity (≈16%); scarcity of long-term local-currency project finance (≈10%); and residual investment-protection uncertainty (≈6%).

What Drives Tanzania's FDI Disbursement Gap?

Estimated share of the shortfall attributable to each structural driver.

TICGL note: a one percentage-point improvement in Tanzania's realisation rate on the current ~USD 11 billion registered base is estimated to be worth approximately USD 100-110 million in additional annual FDI inflows — meaning the conversion problem, not the attraction problem, is Tanzania's most actionable investment-climate lever.

2.5 Regional Benchmarking: Tanzania vs Kenya vs Rwanda vs Ethiopia

Kenya's absolute FDI stock is smaller than Tanzania's, but its realisation rate, approval speed and regulatory-quality score are all materially stronger.

Country2024 Actual FDI (USD bn)Est. realisation rateAvg. approval timeB-READY score
Tanzania1.72~20%~240 days52.1
Kenya0.70~45%~90 days58.8
Ethiopia3.90~42%~180 days54.3
Rwanda0.90~68%~28 days72.6

Realisation Rate by Country

Share of registered FDI actually disbursed

Average Investment Approval Time

Days from application to approval

World Bank B-READY Score (2024)

Business Ready index — regulatory quality and ease of doing business benchmark.

Rwanda remains the regional gold standard, and TICGL continues to view it as the most directly transferable reform model for Tanzania given broadly similar economic structure and scale.

3. Reading the Dangote Decision Through the Gap Framework

The refinery decision was overdetermined: even absent the diplomatic misstep, Tanzania's land, permitting and private-capital constraints would have made Tanga a harder sell.

Dangote's stated reasonUnderlying TICGL systemic gap
Mombasa's port is deeper and larger than TangaInfrastructure/industrialisation deficit — ports, power and logistics investment lagging Dira 2050 targets
Kenya has a bigger economy, higher fuel consumptionSmaller realised private-sector base; Tanzania's own private investment share of GDP (~22%) below the 30-35% needed for scale
Kenya offered public co-investment/de-risking via the National Infrastructure FundTanzania's PPP framework exists on paper, but no project has yet reached financial close
Diplomatic friction over the Tanga announcementPolicy predictability and inter-governmental coordination — a governance-adjacent, not purely economic, factor
Feasibility/soil studies already advancing at LamuTanzania's land-acquisition and title process (18-24 months) is the single largest driver (≈28%) of its FDI disbursement gap

TICGL's assessment is therefore that Tanzania should not treat the loss as a one-off political misunderstanding, but as confirmation of gaps already identified in its own research.

4. Policy Recommendations

What government and investors should each take away from the Dangote case.

For the Government of Tanzania

  1. Fast-track the pre-titled industrial/SEZ land bank concept already under discussion at TISEZA, prioritising sites relevant to the Dangote power, fertiliser and port pipeline, to avoid replicating the 18-24 month land-acquisition delay that cost Tanzania the refinery.
  2. Bring at least one Dangote-linked project (power plant, fertiliser complex, or port works) to genuine financial close within 12-18 months, as proof-of-concept for a functioning one-stop investment facilitation process.
  3. Formalise a single-window, legally binding service-level approval process, replacing the current multi-agency sequence that accounts for an estimated 22% of Tanzania's FDI disbursement gap.
  4. Broaden the tax base through informal-sector digitalisation and formalisation incentives rather than raising rates on existing formal taxpayers.
  5. Pursue the offered equity stake in the Lamu refinery on commercially sound terms, to secure fuel-security benefits and stay embedded in East Africa's refined-products value chain.

For TICGL Clients and Investors

  1. Treat land title and multi-agency permitting timelines as the primary bankability risk for large Tanzanian projects, and budget 18-24 months into feasibility schedules unless a pre-titled SEZ site is secured.
  2. Where projects depend on foreign-exchange repatriation certainty, seek forward cover or structure financing to hedge against currently limited long-dated FX facilities.
  3. Benchmark any Tanzania investment decision against Kenya and Rwanda on realisation rate and approval speed, not headline FDI totals alone.
  4. Monitor the Dangote-Tanzania power, fertiliser, port and transport pipeline as a live test case: reaching financial close within 12-24 months would be a strong positive signal for Tanzania's investment climate trajectory.

5. Conclusion

Dangote's choice of Lamu over Tanga is, on the surface, a story about diplomacy and port depth. Beneath that surface, it is consistent with the systemic investment-climate gaps TICGL has documented across its Dira 2050 and FDI-disbursement research: a narrow tax base, an underweight manufacturing and power sector, a private sector still crowded out by government borrowing, and — most tellingly — a land-acquisition and permitting regime that takes many months longer to clear than regional peers.

Tanzania's fundamentals — natural resources, a large and youthful population, an EAC/SADC-bridging location, and continued reform momentum under President Samia Suluhu Hassan — remain genuinely strong, as evidenced by Dangote's parallel commitment to a multi-billion-dollar power, fertiliser, port and transport-corridor pipeline agreed just weeks after the refinery decision was finalised. Whether that pipeline becomes another entry in Tanzania's registration ledger or an actual disbursed, operating asset will depend on exactly the reforms — land banking, single-window approvals, FX certainty, and PPP financial close — that TICGL has been recommending across its research programme.

Muhtasari kwa Kiswahili

Uamuzi wa Dangote na Somo kwa Tanzania
1
Uamuzi: Kampuni ya Dangote imethibitisha kuwa kiwanda chake kikubwa cha kusafisha mafuta (mapipa 700,000 kwa siku, thamani ya Dola za Marekani bilioni 15-20) kitajengwa Lamu, Kenya, badala ya Tanga, Tanzania.
2
Chanzo cha uamuzi: Tatizo la kidiplomasia lilitokea baada ya Rais wa Kenya kutangaza Tanga kama eneo la mradi kabla ya Serikali ya Tanzania kuridhia rasmi, jambo lililomfanya Rais Samia Suluhu Hassan kulikanusha hadharani.
3
Sababu za kibiashara: Dangote alitaja kina kirefu cha bandari ya Mombasa, uchumi mkubwa wa Kenya, matumizi makubwa ya mafuta, na uwekezaji wa moja kwa moja wa Serikali ya Kenya kupitia Mfuko wake wa Miundombinu.
4
TICGL inaona zaidi: Nyuma ya sababu hizo, kuna mapengo ya kimfumo — msingi mdogo wa kodi (13.1% ya Pato la Taifa), sekta ya viwanda inayosalia karibu 8% tu ya uchumi, sekta binafsi inayozibwa na mikopo ya Serikali, na kiwango cha chini cha ubadilishaji wa ahadi za uwekezaji kuwa fedha halisi (karibu 15% mwaka 2025).
5
Fursa mpya: Tarehe 29 Juni 2026, Rais Samia alikutana na Aliko Dangote Ikulu na kupata ahadi ya mradi mbadala — kituo cha umeme cha megawati 2,000, kiwanda cha mbolea, uendelezaji wa bandari, barabara ya kilomita 40, na ukanda wa usafirishaji wa kilomita 812 kutoka Mtwara hadi Mbamba Bay — pamoja na fursa ya Tanzania kununua hisa katika kiwanda cha Lamu.
6
Mapendekezo ya TICGL: Serikali iharakishe upatikanaji wa ardhi na hati miliki, iunde mfumo wa kibali kimoja (single-window approval), na ihakikishe angalau mradi mmoja wa Dangote unafikia hatua ya fedha (financial close) ndani ya miezi 12-18 ijayo, ili kuonesha uwezekano wa Tanzania kuvutia na kutimiza uwekezaji mkubwa.

Want the full research note, underlying data tables, or a briefing tailored to your investment? Reach TICGL Research Division directly.

amran@ticgl.com

Sources

  1. Reuters/CNBC Africa, "Dangote to fund proposed Kenya refinery with cash, bonds and an IPO," 7 July 2026.
  2. TICGL, "What's Next for Tanzania's Economy? The Policy Gaps Keeping $1 Trillion Out of Reach by 2050," June 2026.
  3. TICGL, "Tanzania's FDI Registration-to-Disbursement Gap: Bridging the US$170 Billion Financing Chasm," April 2026.
  4. The Citizen, "Getting to the bottom of the race for East Africa's $17 billion refinery," May 2026.
  5. Business Daily Africa, "Kenya to buy stake in Dangote-fronted oil refinery," May 2026.
  6. Tuko.co.ke, "Mombasa's Critical Role in Dangote's Mega Refinery Plan for East Africa," June 2026.
  7. Kenyans.co.ke / Billionaires.Africa, "Dangote unveils power, fertiliser and port plans for Tanzania," 30 June 2026.
  8. Nairobi Wire / Tribune Online, "Dangote's Kenya Refinery to Refine 700,000 Barrels Daily," 1-2 July 2026.

This research note is prepared by TICGL Research Division / Tanzania Economic Research Institute (TERI) for informational purposes and does not constitute investment advice.

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