• Hausa Edition
  • Podcast
  • Conferences
  • LeVogue Magazine
  • Business News
  • Print Advert Rates
  • Online Advert Rates
  • Contact Us
Wednesday, July 8, 2026
Leadership Newspapers
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Sport
    • Football
  • Health
  • Entertainment
  • Education
  • Opinion
    • Editorial
    • Columns
  • Others
    • LeVogue Magazine
    • Conferences
    • National Economy
  • Contact Us
Hausa Edition
  • Home
  • News
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Sport
    • Football
  • Health
  • Entertainment
  • Education
  • Opinion
    • Editorial
    • Columns
  • Others
    • LeVogue Magazine
    • Conferences
    • National Economy
  • Contact Us
No Result
View All Result
Leadership Newspapers
No Result
View All Result

Gas Association Identifies Poor Dispute Resolution System As Challenge To Capital Inflow

Chika Izuora by Chika Izuora
3 months ago
in Business
027 im02
Share on WhatsAppShare on FacebookShare on XTelegram

The Nigerian Gas Association (NGA) has identified key issues that have challenged the growth of the sector of gas industry as it promotes sustainable development in the sector to stir industrialization in Nigeria as capital inflows wanes.

Part of the concerns identified is dispute resolution and contractual clarity.

At an energy forum hosted by the NGA, stakeholders identified inefficient resolution mechanisms and unpredictable enforcement as persistent deterrents for long-term capital, particularly from international project financiers who price legal risk into their investment calculus.

The forum that was held recently assembled senior legal practitioners, policymakers and industry leaders to examine what participants described as a structural gap between Nigeria’s gas policy aspirations and the commercial frameworks needed to realise them.

The forum, themed “Strengthening Nigeria’s Gas Legal Framework for a Low-Carbon, Commercially Viable Future,” produced a clear consensus: the Petroleum Industry Act, passed in 2021 after nearly two decades of legislative effort, has laid a credible foundation, but its transformative promise hinges on execution quality that Nigeria has yet to consistently demonstrate.

Nigeria’s gas sector has historically suffered from protracted commercial disputes and regulatory ambiguity that extend project timelines and inflate financing costs. Forum delegates argued that closing these gaps through clearer contract standards across the gas value chain and faster arbitration pathways is now as consequential as any infrastructure or fiscal incentive.

The stakes extend beyond domestic policy. As global energy investors weigh competing opportunities across Africa, the Gulf, and Central Asia, legal predictability has emerged as a decisive differentiator.

The event gathered for the first time executives, regulators, and attorneys whose opinion shows that the country’s contractual and regulatory infrastructure is not yet fit for the scale of investment its gas ambitions demand.

“Nigeria’s gas resources present a defining opportunity for economic transformation,” NGA President Aka Nwokedi said in his opening address. “But realising this potential will depend on building a legal framework that is transparent, predictable, and globally competitive.”

RELATED NEWS

JUST IN: 2024 Bid Round: NUPRC Awards 19 Oil Prospecting Licences To 12 Winners

PenCom Targets Deeper Capital Market Role As Pension Assets Hit N31.32trn

Global Oil Companies Heading For Higher Revenue Earnings In Q2, 2026

Participants stressed that Nigeria must demonstrate regulatory coherence and institutional alignment to attract the long-term capital required for gas monetisation at scale. ESG obligations and carbon management standards, they noted, must be embedded in enforceable frameworks rather than left to policy statements, as international investors increasingly subject prospective markets to rigorous sustainability screening.

The forum acknowledged the Tinubu administration’s stated priority of expanding gas infrastructure and boosting domestic utilisation, framing sustained policy continuity as a critical signal to investors evaluating decade-long commitments in the sector.

Nigeria holds Africa’s largest natural gas reserves and has positioned gas as the primary bridge fuel in its energy transition strategy. Yet monetisation has lagged, constrained by infrastructure deficits, pricing distortions, and the legal and regulatory uncertainties the forum sought to address.

Beyond its immediate outputs, the forum’s conveners framed it as the founding edition of a standing institution, a structured annual platform for aligning legal frameworks with fast-moving industry and market realities.

For a sector long accustomed to policy announcements without follow-through, the question delegates left with was whether this forum marks the beginning of a different pattern, or becomes another well-intentioned initiative that fades without implementation.

We’ve got the edge. Get real-time reports, breaking scoops, and exclusive angles delivered straight to your phone. Don’t settle for stale news. Join LEADERSHIP NEWS on WhatsApp for 24/7 updates →

Join Our WhatsApp Channel

Chika Izuora

Chika Izuora

Chika Izuora is a journalist with Leadership Media Group with over two decades of mainstream journalism experience. A Mass Communication graduate and alumnus of Pan Atlantic University (PAU), he has built outstanding expertise in the oil and gas industry alongside a versatile career as a journalist and author.

OTHER NEWS UPDATES

JUST IN: 2024 Bid Round: NUPRC Awards 19 Oil Prospecting Licences To 12 Winners
Business

JUST IN: 2024 Bid Round: NUPRC Awards 19 Oil Prospecting Licences To 12 Winners

4 hours ago
Business

PenCom Targets Deeper Capital Market Role As Pension Assets Hit N31.32trn

6 hours ago
Global Oil Companies Heading For Higher Revenue Earnings In Q2, 2026
Business

Global Oil Companies Heading For Higher Revenue Earnings In Q2, 2026

6 hours ago
Next Post
Nigeria Records Bitumen Supply Pricing Hike Amid Global Energy Crisis

Oil Majors Eye Ultra-Deep Water As Market Faces Potential Supply Gap

Advertisement

LATEST UPDATE

Nigeria Moves To Unlock Local Capital For Carbon Markets, Climate Investments 

11 minutes ago

Imo, 27 LGAs Renew MoU To Boost Grassroots Development, Revenue Drive

16 minutes ago

US To Remove Syria From Terrorism Sanctions List — Trump

31 minutes ago

US Launches Fresh Strikes On Iran As Strait Of Hormuz Tensions Escalate

36 minutes ago

BON Launches 6 Committees To Reposition Broadcasting; Gives 3 Months For Reports

56 minutes ago
Load More
Advertisement
Facebook Twitter Instagram Youtube Whatsapp

© 2026 LEADERSHIP Media Group - All Rights Reserved | Hausa | Online Casino.

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Sport
    • Football
  • Health
  • Entertainment
  • Education
  • Opinion
    • Editorial
    • Columns
  • Others
    • LeVogue Magazine
    • Conferences
    • National Economy
  • Contact Us

© 2026 LEADERSHIP Media Group - All Rights Reserved | Hausa | Online Casino.