The 650,000 barrel per day (bpd) refinery has been delayed by several years and the cost has shot to $19 billion from Dangote's earlier estimates of $12 billion to $14 billion.

"Hopefully, before the end of the third quarter, we should be in the market," the paper quoted him as saying on a weekend tour of the refinery with the head of the African Development Bank. "Full production can start, maybe, by the end of the year or beginning of 2023."

Dangote, who built his fortune in the cement industry, first announced the intention to build a refinery in 2013, with the project expected to be finished in 2016.

The billionaire then moved the site to Lekki in Lagos, upgraded the size and said production would start in early 2020, but the project has faced several delays.

Despite being Africa's biggest oil producer and exporter, Nigeria depends almost entirely on fuel imports after allowing its significant refining capacity of 445,000 bpd to become dilapidated over several decades.

(Reporting by MacDonald Dzirutwe; Editing by David Goodman)