Nigeria continues to play a central role in supplying Cameroon with clinker, a key raw material for cement production, which supports the operation of Dangote Cement's local subsidiary. According to the latest audited financial statements of the group, Nigeria will export 970,100 tons of clinker to Cameroon and Ghana in 2025, which will be transported by 34 cargo ships, an increase of 6.9% over 2024. Data show that Cameroon and Ghana account for 69.3% of Nigeria's total clinker exports, with an overall export volume of 1.4 million tons, an increase of 18.6% over the same period last year.
Election turmoil drags down local market performance
Dangote Cement's local sales in Cameroon have suffered despite strong export momentum. In 2025, the local sales volume declined by 14.1%, the annual capacity of the Douala plant was 1.5 million tons, and the actual output dropped from 1.4 million tons in 2024 to 1.2 million tons, with a reduction of 200,000 tons. The group blamed the downturn on "election-related uncertainty"-riots in several cities after the announcement of the presidential election results in Cameroon in October 2025, which severely impacted economic activity, with Douala, the country's economic hub and factory location, bearing the brunt. US $
1 billion expansion plan lays out the future
Despite the weak performance in 2025, Dangote Cement is optimistic about the prospects of the Cameroon market in 2026. Infrastructure projects such as the Douala-Yaounde Expressway, the construction of roads and bridges across the country and the increase in regional development initiatives are expected to boost cement demand in the short and medium term, the group said in its audited financial report on December 31, 2025.
Dangote Cement entered the Cameroon market in 2015 and set up a factory on the Dualavuri River, ending the 48-year monopoly of the Cimenteries du Cameroun of Lafarge Holley Morocco's African subsidiary. In the near future, the group plans to spend US $1 billion (about 592.6 billion CFA francs) to expand production capacity in Cameroon and six other African countries. On February 28, 2026, Alico Dangote signed a contract with China National Materials Engineering in Lagos. In Cameroon, the group is weighing two options: expanding the existing Douala plant or restarting the Nomayos cement plant project on the outskirts of Yaoundé, which has been shelved for more than a decade.
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