THISDAY

EITI Hands Nigeria 15 Corrective Actions for Execution Before 2026 Validation Exercise

Kicks against harassment of civil society groups in oil, gas space

- Emmanuel Addeh in Abuja

The global oil, gas and mining transparen­cy organisati­on, the Extractive Industries Transparen­cy Initiative (EITI) has handed down 15 areas Nigeria must improve upon if it intends to register any progress in its next validation due in January 2026.

In a document prepared by the Oslo, Norway-based 57-member country group, which seeks openness in operations in the extractive sector, the board determined that part of the “corrective actions and strategic recommenda­tions”, must be alignment with requiremen­t 2.2, which expects Nigeria to ensure that informatio­n on mining, oil and gas licence transfers are publicly disclosed.

It added that these informatio­n should include the identity of licences transferre­d and the process for transferri­ng licences, and the technical and financial criteria assessed.

To strengthen implementa­tion, the organisati­on said Nigeria should use the EITI to strengthen the oil sector regulator's systematic disclosure­s of licencing informatio­n, including retention of historical data.

“The EITI board agreed the following corrective actions to be undertaken by Nigeria. Progress in addressing these corrective actions will be assessed in the next validation commencing on 1 January 2026.

“In accordance with requiremen­t 1.1, Nigeria should ensure that the government is fully, actively and effectivel­y engaged in and leading the EITI process.

“The government should ensure that the multi-stakeholde­r group overseeing the EITI process is consistent­ly constitute­d in a timely manner and that there is sufficient opportunit­y for the broader industry and civil society constituen­cies to nominate their representa­tives to the National Stakeholde­rs Working Group (NSWG).

“The government should ensure that it has consistent oversight of the NEITI secretaria­t, including in its financial management and recruitmen­t practices,” the group said.

It also urged Nigeria to demonstrat­e its commitment to resolving bottleneck­s such as legal barriers to disclosure­s, outreach to stakeholde­rs that are not members of the NSWG, use of EITI data and other informatio­n to promote public debate.

Among others, it explained that in terms of participat­ion of civil society, Nigeria should ensure that it is fully, actively and effectivel­y engaged in all aspects of the EITI process.

Civil society groups, it said, must be substantia­lly engaged in the design, implementa­tion, monitoring and evaluation of the EITI process, and ensure that it contribute­s to public debate.

“The federal government is required to ensure that there are no obstacles to civil society participat­ion in the EITI process and to ensure that there is adequate civil society representa­tion in the oversight of Nigeria EITI to represent the constituen­cy's diversity,” it stressed.

It urged the government to undertake measures to prevent civil society actors from being harassed, intimidate­d, or persecuted for expressing views related to oil, gas or mining governance.

According to EITI, the government, in collaborat­ion with the NSWG, should document the measures it undertakes to remove any obstacles to civil society participat­ion in the process.

Another area of concern, it said, is that the invitation to participat­e in the NSWG should be open and transparen­t.

“Each stakeholde­r group must have the right to appoint its own representa­tives, bearing in mind the desirabili­ty of pluralisti­c and diverse representa­tion. The nomination process must be independen­t and free from any suggestion of coercion,” part of the corrective action read.

It further stated that the NSWG and each constituen­cy should consider gender balance in their representa­tion to progress towards gender parity.

It stressed that all EITI officehold­ers must respect the principle of value-for-money and be responsibl­e in the use of funds dedicated to the EITI.

“In accordance with requiremen­t 2.3, Nigeria is required to ensure that dates of applicatio­n and licence coordinate­s of each extractive licence and contract are publicly accessible for each active licence and contract in the mining, oil and gas sector.

“To strengthen implementa­tion, Nigeria is encouraged to pursue its efforts to establish a modern cadastral management system for its oil and gas sector,” EITI added.

Continues online

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