Nigeria’s oil revenue structure shifted decisively when President Bola Tinubu signed the Tinubu executive order oil revenues directive, ordering that profit oil, profit gas and related proceeds be paid directly into the Federation Account — effectively dismantling key retention mechanisms established under the Petroleum Industry Act.
Signed on February 13, 2026, the order mandates that royalty oil, tax oil, profit oil and profit gas due to the federation be paid directly into the central revenue pool. It also halts NNPC Limited’s authority to collect and manage the 30 per cent Frontier Exploration Fund.
A Revenue Architecture Just Redefined
Under the Petroleum Industry Act framework enacted in 2021, NNPC Limited retained 30 per cent of profit oil and gas under certain production-sharing arrangements as a management fee. In addition, 30 per cent of profit allocations were directed toward the Frontier Exploration Fund, while 20 per cent of profits were preserved for working capital and future investments.
The presidency argues that these layered deductions diverted substantial federation revenues before remittance, contributing to declining net inflows available for statutory allocation to federal, state and local governments.
Ending The Frontier Retention Era
One of the most consequential provisions of the order removes NNPC’s control over the Frontier Exploration Fund. The 30 per cent profit allocation previously earmarked for exploration in frontier basins must now be transferred directly into the Federation Account.
The administration contends that funds of that magnitude risk accumulating idle balances and encouraging inefficient expenditure at a time of fiscal strain. By redirecting the allocation, the government seeks to expand distributable revenues across the three tiers of government.
The order also suspends payment of gas flare penalties into the Midstream and Downstream Gas Infrastructure Fund, directing instead that such penalties be remitted to the Federation Account.
The Structural Fault Lines Behind The Decision
The Petroleum Industry Act was designed to commercialise NNPC Limited and improve transparency in Nigeria’s petroleum sector. However, critics have argued that multiple retention layers embedded within the Act diluted remittances and created overlapping revenue channels.
By intervening through executive authority, the administration has moved to override specific operational elements of the framework while signalling a broader review of the PIA in consultation with stakeholders.
At issue is the balance between maintaining NNPC as a commercially viable entity and safeguarding constitutional revenue entitlements of the federation.
Why States Are Watching Closely
Oil revenue remains central to Nigeria’s fiscal federalism structure. Increases in direct remittance to the Federation Account could translate into higher monthly allocations for states and local governments, particularly amid rising debt obligations and security expenditures.
However, the restructuring may also narrow discretionary buffers previously available within NNPC’s retained earnings, potentially affecting capital planning within the company.
The fiscal implications will become clearer once revenue flows under the new directive begin reflecting in Federation Account Allocation Committee distributions.
The Stakes Beyond The Oil Fields
The presidency has constituted a joint implementation committee comprising the Minister of Finance, the Attorney-General, the Minister of Budget and National Planning, the Minister of State for Petroleum Resources (Oil), the Chairman of the Nigeria Revenue Service and other senior officials.
Their mandate is to supervise compliance and oversee integrated petroleum operations under the revised remittance regime.
The administration has also indicated that a comprehensive review of the Petroleum Industry Act will follow, potentially leading to legislative amendments.
For now, the Tinubu executive order oil revenues decision signals a significant recalibration of Nigeria’s petroleum revenue governance — one that could reshape the financial relationship between NNPC Limited and the Federation Account for years to come.
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