The Gender Equality and Development Initiative (GEADI) welcomes the renewed commitment by stakeholders at the 2026 Nigerian Midstream and Downstream Petroleum Regulatory Authority (NMDPRA) General Counsel and Legal Advisers Forum, held in Abuja on 29 June 2026, to strengthen regulatory certainty and enhance investor confidence through the effective implementation of the Petroleum Industry Act (PIA) 2021.
Key Highlight:
- GEADI backs regulatory reforms aimed at strengthening investor confidence through effective implementation of the Petroleum Industry Act (PIA) 2021.
- Regulatory certainty seen as key to attracting long-term investment, expanding petroleum infrastructure, and creating jobs in Nigeria.
- Senate oversight on local content is highlighted as essential to ensuring investments translate into employment, technology transfer, and indigenous participation.
- Greater inclusion for women urged, with GEADI calling for equal opportunities in the petroleum sector to address gender inequality and economic marginalisation.
- Investment and local content linked, with GEADI stressing that sustainable growth depends on transparent regulation, strong oversight, and inclusive development.
The Forum’s theme, “Beyond Compliance: Driving Regulatory Certainty and Investment Confidence in Nigeria’s Petroleum Sector,” reflects Nigeria’s determination to build a petroleum industry founded on transparency, consistency, accountability and legal predictability.
These are the qualities that investors seek before committing long-term capital to any economy.This also aligns with President Bola Ahmed’s Renewed Hope Agenda for Investors.
Regulatory certainty is far more than a legal or administrative principle. It assures investors that laws and regulations will be applied fairly, consistently and transparently without unexpected policy shifts that could undermine investment decisions. Such confidence encourages fresh capital inflows, supports expansion of petroleum infrastructure, stimulates industrial growth and ultimately creates employment opportunities for Nigerians.
However, attracting investment should not be the final objective. The greater challenge is ensuring that the benefits of those investments are widely shared among Nigerians through employment creation, local capacity development, technology transfer, indigenous enterprise growth and equal opportunities for women and young people.
This is where the oversight responsibility of the National Assembly becomes indispensable.
The Senate Committee on Local Content occupies a strategic position as a critical legislative oversight body whose work complements these ongoing regulatory reforms. Through effective oversight of local content implementation, the Committee helps ensure that the objectives of regulatory certainty are translated into measurable benefits for Nigerians.
A stable regulatory environment should not only reassure investors but also guarantee that investments promote Nigerian participation, strengthen indigenous companies, encourage skills development and create sustainable employment across the petroleum value chain.
The Nigerian Oil and Gas Industry Content Development Act, 2010, was enacted to ensure that the nation’s petroleum resources contribute meaningfully to national development by maximizing the utilization of Nigerian human and material resources.
As implementation of the Petroleum Industry Act continues to evolve, close collaboration among regulators, industry operators and the Senate Committee on Local Content will be essential to ensuring that investment growth and local content development progress side by side.
From a gender perspective, these reforms present an important opportunity.
Women have historically remained underrepresented in many high-value segments of Nigeria’s petroleum industry, particularly in engineering, operations, technical services, executive leadership and major procurement opportunities. This imbalance has contributed to the economic marginalisation of many women and, in broader terms, to the feminisation of poverty.
Greater regulatory certainty has the potential to reverse this trend. Increased investment creates new businesses, expands existing operations and generates demand for skilled professionals, contractors, consultants and entrepreneurs. If accompanied by deliberate implementation of local content policies and equal opportunity practices, these investments can significantly increase women’s participation throughout the petroleum value chain.
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Conversely, regulatory ambiguity, inconsistent interpretation of laws and policy uncertainty disproportionately affect women-owned businesses and female professionals, many of whom have fewer financial resources to absorb investment risks or navigate prolonged regulatory disputes. Regulatory certainty therefore represents not only an economic imperative but also a gender equality imperative.
As Founder of the Gender Equality and Development Initiative (GEADI) I strongly believe that investor confidence and local content development are complementary—not competing—objectives. A predictable regulatory framework attracts investment, while effective legislative oversight ensures that such investment translates into jobs, technology transfer, indigenous participation, community development and inclusive economic growth.
Nigeria stands at a defining moment in the implementation of the Petroleum Industry Act. By combining sound regulation, strong legislative oversight and faithful implementation of local content obligations, the country can build a petroleum sector that is globally competitive while remaining socially inclusive.
GEADI therefore commends the Nigerian Midstream and Downstream Petroleum Regulatory Authority, industry stakeholders and the Senate Committee on Local Content for their respective roles in promoting a petroleum industry founded on transparency, accountability and sustainable development.
Ultimately, the true success of regulatory certainty should not be measured solely by the volume of investments attracted into Nigeria. It should also be measured by the number of Nigerians employed, the growth of indigenous businesses, the strengthening of local capacity, and the extent to which women are empowered to participate meaningfully in one of the nation’s most strategic economic sectors.
When regulation inspires confidence, investment grows. When investment grows, local content must grow alongside it. And when both work together under effective legislative oversight, Nigeria moves closer to achieving sustainable economic development, shared prosperity and genuine gender equality.



