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Mining sector on upward trajectory on strength of local content

The oil and gas local content policy has been hailed as a game changer both in Nigeria and outside these shores. The model is being adopted across several sectors, the latest being the mining sector.

Nigeria’s mining industry is undergoing a significant transformation, driven by targeted local content policies from the Nigerian Content Development and Monitoring Board (NCDMB). These policies, showcased at the African Natural Resources and Energy Investment Summit in Abuja, are being hailed as a possible blueprint for industrial growth across Africa.

 

At the heart of the reforms is the Board’s intervention in the barite value chain – a mineral required for drilling in the oil and gas industry. Felix Ogbe, NCDMB’s Executive Secretary outlined how the agency has spent more than a decade building domestic capacity, from certifying reserves in six states to mandating exclusive procurement from local processors through the Nigerian Content Equipment Certificate (NCEC).

Today, barite importation for drilling is prohibited in Nigeria,” Ogbe said. “That didn’t happen by accident. It was made possible by deliberate policy instruments, stakeholder partnerships, and enforcement frameworks, he said.

 

Dr Abdulmalik Halilu, NCDMB’s Director of Corporate Services, who represented his boss said the interventions have boosted value retention, created jobs, and positioned Nigeria as a continental model for mineral-based industrialisation. Similar policies are being rolled out in the steel and pipe manufacturing sectors, including a 2022 directive requiring in-country sourcing of bare line pipes and oil tubular goods.

The reforms are reinforced by broader industrial support programmes such as the Nigerian Oil and Gas Industrial Parks (NOGaPS), and a US$350 million Nigerian Content Intervention Fund managed in partnership with the Bank of Industry to scale up local manufacturing.

The clearest evidence of these reforms is Nigeria’s expanding lithium and battery value chain, highlighted by the Minister of Solid Minerals, Dr Dele Alake. He revealed that over $800 million in mining investments were secured in 2024 alone, following a major policy shift requiring all mining licences to include local processing plans.

Also Read: NCDMB’s new compliance tools to deepen local content in oil and gas

 

The Nasarawa lithium battery plant, valued at $100 million, is already up and running. A $600 million lithium refinery near the KadunaNiger border is on the way. These facilities are anchored on one thing: local content, Alake said.

He added that government revenue from mining surged from ₦6 billion in 2023 to ₦38 billion in 2024 – a six-fold increase credited to tighter licensing, enforcement of value-addition rules, and new industrial investments.

This impact is not lost on Nigeria’s neighbours. Liberia’s Petroleum Regulatory Authority Chairman, Jake Kabakole, described Nigeria’s local content regime as a “continental model”, urging African nations to adapt its legal and institutional frameworks to unlock similar outcomes.

 

The shift is not just regulatory but economic. Indigenous Nigerian firms now contribute 15 per cent of oil production and 60 per cent of domestic gas supply. Engineering and fabrication companies such as Dormanlong, Saipem, and Aveon Offshore are executing complex projects previously handled by foreign multinationals.

Beyond minerals and manufacturing, the NCDMB has also enforced local employment regulations through its partnership with COREN, ensuring that only certified Nigerian engineers are deployed on projects. In tandem, a customs alert system now prevents the importation of goods – such as cables, paints, and valves – that are produced locally. Local content is not a constraint; it is an enabler. When deployed intentionally, it becomes a lever for self-sufficiency, industrial growth, and economic sovereignty, Halilu said.

Also Read: NCDMB’s Ogbe joins African petroleum producers’ board

 

As African leaders at the summit discussed regional energy integration and industrialisation, Nigeria’s example stood out. Delegates praised the country for turning policy into measurable outcomes – from factory construction to formalised artisanal mining cooperatives and electric vehicle assembly plans. We are no longer exporters of raw potential. We are builders of real value.

Adebayo Adelabu, Nigeria’s Minister of Power emphasised that local content must be measurable. He highlighted reforms under the Electricity Act 2023, which decentralised electricity governance and enabled 11 states to begin managing their own power markets. He said the government is aligning its electrification drive with local manufacturing -including clean energy projects, metre assembly, and solar equipment production. The real value of local content lies in supply chains, technical jobs, and local ownership.

From East Africa, Kenya’s Minister of Mining and Blue Economy, Hassan Ali Jobbo, offered a cautionary note. He urged African nations to define their own priorities in the minerals sector rather than simply adopting classifications imposed by others. Africa has talked too long about potential without decisive action,” he said. “We must decide for ourselves which minerals are critical to our future not wait for outsiders to tell us.

Nigeria’s mining industry is undergoing a significant transformation, driven by targeted local content policies from the Nigerian Content Development and Monitoring Board (NCDMB). These policies, showcased at the African Natural Resources and Energy Investment Summit in Abuja, are being hailed as a possible blueprint for industrial growth across Africa.

 

At the heart of the reforms is the Board’s intervention in the barite value chain – a mineral required for drilling in the oil and gas industry. Felix Ogbe, NCDMB’s Executive Secretary outlined how the agency has spent more than a decade building domestic capacity, from certifying reserves in six states to mandating exclusive procurement from local processors through the Nigerian Content Equipment Certificate (NCEC).

Today, barite importation for drilling is prohibited in Nigeria,” Ogbe said. “That didn’t happen by accident. It was made possible by deliberate policy instruments, stakeholder partnerships, and enforcement frameworks, he said.

Dr Abdulmalik Halilu, NCDMB’s Director of Corporate Services, who represented his boss said the interventions have boosted value retention, created jobs, and positioned Nigeria as a continental model for mineral-based industrialisation. Similar policies are being rolled out in the steel and pipe manufacturing sectors, including a 2022 directive requiring in-country sourcing of bare line pipes and oil tubular goods.

 

The reforms are reinforced by broader industrial support programmes such as the Nigerian Oil and Gas Industrial Parks (NOGaPS), and a US$350 million Nigerian Content Intervention Fund managed in partnership with the Bank of Industry to scale up local manufacturing.

The clearest evidence of these reforms is Nigeria’s expanding lithium and battery value chain, highlighted by the Minister of Solid Minerals, Dr Dele Alake. He revealed that over $800 million in mining investments were secured in 2024 alone, following a major policy shift requiring all mining licences to include local processing plans.

 

The Nasarawa lithium battery plant, valued at $100 million, is already up and running. A $600 million lithium refinery near the KadunaNiger border is on the way. These facilities are anchored on one thing: local content, Alake said.

He added that government revenue from mining surged from ₦6 billion in 2023 to ₦38 billion in 2024 – a six-fold increase credited to tighter licensing, enforcement of value-addition rules, and new industrial investments.

This impact is not lost on Nigeria’s neighbours. Liberia’s Petroleum Regulatory Authority Chairman, Jake Kabakole, described Nigeria’s local content regime as a “continental model”, urging African nations to adapt its legal and institutional frameworks to unlock similar outcomes.

The shift is not just regulatory but economic. Indigenous Nigerian firms now contribute 15 per cent of oil production and 60 per cent of domestic gas supply. Engineering and fabrication companies such as Dormanlong, Saipem, and Aveon Offshore are executing complex projects previously handled by foreign multinationals.

 

Beyond minerals and manufacturing, the NCDMB has also enforced local employment regulations through its partnership with COREN, ensuring that only certified Nigerian engineers are deployed on projects. In tandem, a customs alert system now prevents the importation of goods – such as cables, paints, and valves – that are produced locally. Local content is not a constraint; it is an enabler. When deployed intentionally, it becomes a lever for self-sufficiency, industrial growth, and economic sovereignty, Halilu said.

As African leaders at the summit discussed regional energy integration and industrialisation, Nigeria’s example stood out. Delegates praised the country for turning policy into measurable outcomes – from factory construction to formalised artisanal mining cooperatives and electric vehicle assembly plans. We are no longer exporters of raw potential. We are builders of real value.

Adebayo Adelabu, Nigeria’s Minister of Power emphasised that local content must be measurable. He highlighted reforms under the Electricity Act 2023, which decentralised electricity governance and enabled 11 states to begin managing their own power markets. He said the government is aligning its electrification drive with local manufacturing -including clean energy projects, metre assembly, and solar equipment production. The real value of local content lies in supply chains, technical jobs, and local ownership.

 

From East Africa, Kenya’s Minister of Mining and Blue Economy, Hassan Ali Jobbo, offered a cautionary note. He urged African nations to define their own priorities in the minerals sector rather than simply adopting classifications imposed by others. Africa has talked too long about potential without decisive action,” he said. “We must decide for ourselves which minerals are critical to our future not wait for outsiders to tell us.

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