The recent smear campaign is just one of the many attempts by western NGOs to keep Africa in the dark.
The independent non-profit organization Dialogue Earth has faced allegations of orchestrating a smear campaign against the Dangote Refinery, which is the largest refinery in Africa with a capacity of 650,000 barrels per day. Reports suggest that the NGO reached out to Nigerian journalist David Hundeyin to write an article questioning the refinery's impact on Nigeria's climate goals and the broader implications of increased fossil fuel consumption in the country. In a statement shared on X, Hundeyin characterizes the article as an effort by a Western NGO to co-opt an African perspective in promoting energy poverty across the continent.
The African Energy Chamber (AEC), which represents the interests of the African energy sector and champions African voices, has vehemently denounced the unethical strategies employed by Dialogue Earth to recruit Africans in undermining their own oil and gas industry. The AEC has consistently advocated for the essential role that oil and gas play in fostering economic growth and promoting clean energy solutions in Africa. Initiatives like the Dangote Refinery, Nigeria's first large-scale refinery, have the potential to revolutionize West Africa by decreasing dependence on imported fuels, enhancing the availability of clean, locally-produced petroleum, and generating employment and business prospects. The campaign by Dialogue Earth exemplifies the Western narrative that vilifies the industry and obstructs significant advancements in addressing energy poverty in Africa.
Dialogue Earth allegedly offered Hundeyin USD $500 to write the article, with the brief highlighting several contradictions and areas of concern. Firstly, Dialogue Earth allegedly shared that the purpose of the article was to identify the environmental implications of the Dangote Refinery on Nigeria, particularly within the context of the country’s energy transition. However, Nigeria has strongly advocated for the role oil and gas plays in its transition, advocating for a just transition whereby the country can reduce emissions in a way that protects the economy and reduces energy poverty. As one of the biggest oil producers in Africa, Nigeria considers oil and gas to be central to creating the conditions by which the country can transition. As the industry grows, it will generate revenue, strengthen economic activities while promoting low-carbon fuel production. As such, the refinery plays an intrinsic part in the Nigerian energy transition, despite what Dialogue Earth is attempting to state.
Secondly, the brief allegedly includes objectives such as investigating the environmental consequences of the refinery within the context of its adherence to emission standards. As Hundeyin so aptly writes in his statement, Nigeria has long-faced that challenge of relying on imported petroleum, owing largely to the lack of facilities such as Dangote. This has led to West African fuel cargoes – refined internationally – featuring toxic waste and sulfur content that is 200 times the European legal limit. Through the Dangote Refinery, Nigeria will not only be able to reduce its reliance on imported petroleum but put in place clear restrictions regarding sulfur content, thereby promoting environmental protection. Yet Dialogue Earth doesn’t seem to care about toxic fuel, only that a refinery that will transform West Africa is put to rest.
The story also aims to explore the geopolitical implications of Nigeria’s growing oil industry and the motivations of the refinery. This is ironic given the lack of recognition by Dialogue Earth to the critical role the refinery plays in developing the economy, contributing to global fuel stability while strengthening the energy industry in Nigeria. This attempted smear campaign shows that NGOs such as Dialogue Earth are only advocating for climate change when it suites them and that they have no problem keeping Africa in the dark, using African voices to do so.
“The AEC fully supports Hundeyin and commends him for standing up against Dialogue Earth. We are wholly against a western NGO trying to use African voices to advance their own biased agenda. The attempt to get a well-known Nigerian journalist to effectively endorse such a smear campaign shows a cowardly approach by the western NGO to try and destroy the African oil and gas industry, all because they can’t do it with their own names or organizations,” stated NJ Ayuk, Executive Chairman of the AEC.
The recent attempt by Dialogue Earth is just one of the many attempts by western-based and funded NGOs to stop oil and gas projects in Africa. From the East African Crude Oil Pipeline in Uganda to offshore exploration in South Africa to LNG projects in Mozambique, such organizations appear committed to restricting access to energy in Africa.
“We have seen how African crude oil has been treated, how funding for Mozambique LNG has been treated, how the west has constantly attacked South Africa as it tries to develop it its natural gas and how they have constantly attacked other gas projects and cut off financing. These tactics are hurtful to African development, our fight against energy poverty and to young people that want to build strong democracies,” added Ayuk.