Nigeriaโs oil governance framework may face recalibration as Tinubu signals PIA review executive order discussions following a fresh directive affecting regulatory and fiscal structures in the petroleum sector.
The development comes after the President signed an executive order intended to address operational bottlenecks and improve sector competitiveness.
Officials familiar with the policy shift said the review would not dismantle the Petroleum Industry Act (PIA) but examine areas where implementation challenges have emerged.

Executive action precedes legislative reflection
The executive order is understood to target investment climate concerns, regulatory duplication and delays affecting upstream and midstream operators.
While details of potential amendments remain under review, government sources say the administration is assessing whether aspects of the PIA require refinement to attract new capital inflows.
The PIA, enacted to overhaul Nigeriaโs oil and gas sector governance, introduced fiscal reforms, host community frameworks and restructuring of national oil assets.
Investment confidence under scrutiny
Industry stakeholders have raised concerns over regulatory overlap and tax clarity since the PIA came into force.
Energy analysts note that global capital allocation to hydrocarbons has become increasingly competitive, with investors weighing fiscal stability and legal predictability.
Officials argue that executive adjustments may streamline processes while preserving the core architecture of the Act.
Reform without reversal
Government sources emphasised that the signal of review does not amount to repeal.
Instead, the administration appears focused on fine-tuning provisions affecting revenue flows, licensing efficiency and sector transparency.
The presidency has not yet transmitted any formal amendment bill to the National Assembly, but consultations are expected to intensify.
What recalibration could mean
A review of the PIA could affect revenue-sharing formulas, incentive structures and regulatory timelines.
Energy sector observers say even modest adjustments could influence production targets and federal revenue projections.
If the review strengthens clarity and predictability, it may improve investor confidence. If uncertainty persists, market hesitation could deepen.
For now, the signal from the presidency is measured: reform where necessary, preserve what works.
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