Africa’s Richest Man’s Wealth Surges To Highest In Seven Years

ALIKO Dangote, the richest man in Africa, is on track to close the year at the richest level he has ever been since 2014 buoyed by the second straight year of gains at his cement unit.

The rising share price of his Dangote Cement Plc and higher oil and fertiliser prices helped boost the 64-year-old Nigerian businessman’s wealth by as much as $2.3bn this year to $20.1 bn as of December 3, the richest he has been since 2014, according to the Bloomberg Bilionaires Index. The highest his wealth has touched on the index was $26.7bn in June 2014.

Robust cement demand and rising prices of the construction material in Africa’s biggest economy have helped boost revenue at Dangote Cement, the tycoon’s main asset. Dangote is also poised to complete a $19bn refinery that has the capacity to more than meet Nigeria’s fuel demand, which is currently met by imports.

Dangote, this year, also started exporting fertiliser to the US and Brazil after the completion of a plant with a capacity to produce 3 million tons of urea and ammonia annually.

Born into a wealthy Muslim family of traders in the north, Dangote incorporated his own business selling cement at 21. He shifted to manufacturing the building material in the 1990s, helped by government policies that encouraged ways to reduce the need for imports.

Critics accuse him of taking advantage of his closeness to the government to gain an unfair market advantage, a claim he has repeatedly dismissed. Nigeria’s state oil firm in June announced plans to acquire a 20 percent stake in the Dangote refinery.

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