The Gender Equality and Development Initiative (GEADI) has commended stakeholders at the 2026 Nigerian Midstream and Downstream Petroleum Regulatory Authority (NMDPRA) General Counsel and Legal Advisers Forum for reaffirming their commitment to strengthening regulatory certainty and enhancing investor confidence through the effective implementation of the Petroleum Industry Act (PIA) 2021.
Key Highlights:
This was contained in a statement issued by the organisation’s Head of Information and Public Relations, Blessing Oziwo.
According to the statement, the forum, held in Abuja on June 29, 2026, with the theme: “Beyond Compliance: Driving Regulatory Certainty and Investment Confidence in Nigeria’s Petroleum Sector,” reflects Nigeria’s commitment to building a petroleum industry anchored on transparency, consistency, accountability and legal predictability.
The advocacy group noted that these principles are essential for attracting long-term investment and align with President Bola Tinubu’s Renewed Hope Agenda aimed at improving the country’s investment climate.
GEADI stated that regulatory certainty goes beyond legal or administrative compliance, explaining that it provides investors with confidence that laws and policies will be implemented fairly, consistently and transparently without sudden policy reversals capable of discouraging investment.
According to the organisation, a predictable regulatory environment encourages fresh capital inflows, supports petroleum infrastructure development, stimulates industrial growth and creates employment opportunities for Nigerians.
Read Also:
- Dangote Refinery, NLNG dominate Nigeria LPG supply as imports drop to 15% — NMDPRA Report
- NMDPRA launches technical working group to boost investment in Nigeria’s Midstream, Downstream Oil sector
- NMDPRA confirms Dangote Refinery provided 61% of petrol consumption n January
However, the group stressed that attracting investment should not be regarded as the ultimate objective.
“It is equally important to ensure that the benefits of investment translate into employment generation, local capacity development, technology transfer, indigenous enterprise growth and equal opportunities for women and young people,” the statement said.
GEADI further emphasised the importance of legislative oversight in achieving these objectives.
According to the organisation, the Senate Committee on Local Content occupies a strategic position in ensuring that regulatory reforms produce measurable benefits for Nigerians through effective oversight of local content implementation.

The group stated that a stable regulatory environment should not only reassure investors but also strengthen indigenous companies, encourage skills development and promote sustainable employment across the petroleum value chain.
It noted that the Nigerian Oil and Gas Industry Content Development Act, 2010, was enacted to maximise the utilisation of Nigerian human and material resources within the petroleum industry, adding that stronger collaboration among regulators, industry operators and the Senate Committee on Local Content remains essential as implementation of the Petroleum Industry Act progresses.
From a gender perspective, GEADI described the reforms as an opportunity to address the persistent underrepresentation of women in critical areas of Nigeria’s petroleum industry, including engineering, technical services, operations, executive leadership and procurement.
The organisation observed that the imbalance has contributed to the economic marginalisation of women and, more broadly, the feminisation of poverty.
GEADI explained that increased regulatory certainty could encourage greater investment, leading to new businesses, expanded operations and increased demand for skilled professionals, contractors and entrepreneurs.
It added that when supported by effective local content implementation and equal opportunity policies, such investments could significantly improve women’s participation across the petroleum value chain.
The group also warned that inconsistent policy implementation and regulatory uncertainty often place women-owned businesses and female professionals at a disadvantage because many possess fewer financial resources to absorb investment risks or withstand prolonged regulatory disputes.
According to GEADI, regulatory certainty is therefore not only an economic necessity but also a critical tool for advancing gender equality.
The organisation maintained that investor confidence and local content development are complementary rather than competing objectives.
It stated that while a predictable regulatory framework attracts investment, effective legislative oversight ensures that such investments translate into jobs, technology transfer, indigenous participation, community development and inclusive economic growth.
GEADI described Nigeria as being at a critical stage in the implementation of the Petroleum Industry Act, stressing that the country has an opportunity to build a globally competitive petroleum industry while ensuring that its benefits are broadly shared.
The organisation commended the Nigerian Midstream and Downstream Petroleum Regulatory Authority (NMDPRA), industry stakeholders and the Senate Committee on Local Content for their roles in promoting transparency, accountability and sustainable development within the petroleum sector.
GEADI concluded that the success of regulatory certainty should not be measured solely by the volume of investments attracted into Nigeria.
According to the organisation, it should also be assessed by the number of Nigerians employed, the growth of indigenous businesses, the expansion of local capacity and the increased participation of women in one of the country’s most strategic economic sectors.
The group added that when regulation inspires confidence, investment grows; when investment grows, local content must expand alongside it; and when both are supported by effective legislative oversight, Nigeria moves closer to achieving sustainable economic development, shared prosperity and genuine gender equality.



