As of 8th April 2025, Lagos and Port Harcourt terminals remain active with the discharge and loading of petroleum products. Terminals operated by Dangote, NIPCO, and BONO in Lagos, alongside Watson’s activity in Port Harcourt, reflect steady refined product movement in the downstream supply chain.
Tanker Arrivals and Discharges
LAGOS
DANGOTE Refinery Jetty
Vessel: AZURE NOVA
Product: Crude Oil
Quantity: 270,250 metric tonnes
Status: Arrived on the 6th of April
Remarks: Discharge operation into Dangote Refinery commenced on arrival
Vessel: CASPAR
Product: Crude Oil
Quantity: 294,076 metric tonnes
Status: Arrived on the 6th of April
Remarks: Active discharge ongoing
Vessel: SONANGOL KALANDULA
Product: Crude Oil
Quantity: 130,000 metric tonnes
Status: Arrived on the 1st of April
Remarks: Vessel remains on standby for jetty space
Vessel: STELLA SUNRISE
Product: Crude Oil
Quantity: 135,909 metric tonnes
Status: Arrived on the 5th of April
Remarks: Queued behind earlier arrivals
NIPCO Terminal
Vessel: CLYDE
Product: Automotive Gas Oil (AGO)
Quantity: 25,000 metric tonnes
Status: Arrived on the 6th of April
Remarks: Vessel receiving AGO from Dangote Refinery
Vessel: BINTA SALEH
Product: Premium Motor Spirit (PMS)
Quantity: 38,000 metric tonnes
Status: Arrived on the 3th of April
Remarks: Ongoing discharge operation since ETB
BONO Terminal
Vessel: SAVANNA
Product: Premium Motor Spirit (PMS)
Quantity: 20,000 metric tonnes
Status: Arrived on the 5th of April
Remarks: Discharge progressing smoothly
PORT HARCOURT
Liquid Bulk Terminal
Vessel: WATSON
Product: Premium Motor Spirit (PMS)
Quantity: 20,000 metric tonnes
Status: Arrived on the 6th of April
Remarks: Discharging commenced 7th April
Market Observation
Refined petroleum traffic at Lagos terminals shows continued coordination between domestic production and imports, With total crude oil inflows into Dangote refinery. A total of 58,000 MT of PMS and 25,000 MT of AGO is being handled across the listed Lagos terminals, while Port Harcourt contributes 20,000 MT of PMS via WATSON, bringing it up to a total of 103,000 MT of PMS/AGO. These figures reflect ongoing momentum in Nigeria’s fuel logistics network.