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Local Content Requirements in Nigeria's Extractive Sector and the Implications for Sustainable Development

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  27 December 2021

Oyeniyi Abe*
Affiliation:
University of Huddersfield, Huddersfield, UK
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Abstract

This article examines the framework of Nigeria's local content laws and policy, and the implications for sustainable development. The legislation is geared towards safeguarding local productivity and aiding the progressive aspirations of Nigeria's citizens. While commendable in principle, there have been questions about policy articulation, implementation and enforcement mechanisms, especially with regard to the Sustainable Development Goals. The article examines the local content legislation in Nigeria, and how policies have shaped the community-corporate nexus. This exposes the challenges facing extractive resource governance in a jurisdiction such as Nigeria and the discourses that have permeated legal scholarship on the practical deference to local content by non-state actors. It considers that well designed and implemented local content requirements are catalysts for structural development. To achieve sustainable development of its extractive sector, Nigeria requires state-led determination to stimulate economic growth and development. The article argues for continuous consultation as a bedrock for meaningful engagement.

Type
Research Article
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
Copyright
Copyright © The Author(s), 2021. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of SOAS University of London

INTRODUCTION

This article aims to inform debates seeking to understand how local content requirements (LCRs) can create some form of social exclusion if not implemented effectively. The exploration of renewable and non-renewable energies has led to severe human rights violations, often at the hands of state and corporate actors.Footnote 1 These projects have become sites of deep socio-political and cultural contestation among a variety of stakeholders, and often have an impact on the cultural and economic liberalization of marginalized communities. While international human rights instruments oblige state actors to protect, fulfil and respect human rights,Footnote 2 non-state actors have hidden under the protection of the doctrine enshrined in the Westphalian approach to state responsibility,Footnote 3 with a view to avoiding any responsibility to respect human rights or to mitigate effects where violations occur. Local communities, hosts to extractive projects, have lamented being deprived of basic human rights protection, including access to social, cultural, political and economic variables, which ensure a roadmap to sustainable development. Projects that tend to create social exclusion often result in social resistance. This resistance to development projects is a significant facet of the political economy of resource extraction.Footnote 4 The difficulties inherent in decades of mismanaging extractive projects are evident through the ways in which the power, interests, incentives and characteristics of political systems shape how extractive industry projects are developed, the impacts of governance interventions and the ultimate outcomes of both. This impact of governance interventions steered states to design several initiatives geared towards the meaningful participation of key stakeholders in the management of their natural resources. One of these initiatives is LCRs, enacted by states to guarantee the inclusion and meaningful participation of the local communities that bear the greatest impact of resource projects.

This article adds to the body of existing literature in further investigating local content, on the one hand as a conversational and policy intervention that is constructive for communities that are hosts to extractive projects, and on the other as an intervention that initiates discourse on the “new modalities of neoliberal governance” of resource projects in African societies.Footnote 5 The article argues that enumerative LCRs are one of the most efficient ways to leverage natural resources for sustainable development. It examines the challenges and prospects of local content legislation implemented by Nigeria, and contrasts this with policy articulations in the extractive sector. The objective is to probe strategy options taken and mechanisms adopted to meet the purpose of increasing economic assistance for local communities. The article achieves this by investigating the institutional stratagems and interests that have promoted the development of local content in resource-rich countries, such as Nigeria. In examining the various legislation and policy, the article assesses how these policies can contrast corporate profit maximization with an incentive to re-invest in communities impacted by extractive projects.

The importance of LCRs in Nigeria's extractive sector is significant. First, Nigeria represents an important country in the development archetype and is a key resource-rich country among developing states. Secondly, Nigeria has implemented differentiated laws and policies anchored on local dynamics of production. For instance, Nigeria's local content is enacted to favour host communities, while its policies guarantee that foreign investors present a plan that produces a net benefit to Nigeria, derived from elements such as employment, resource processing and local participation in the business. However, it appears that responsibility for LCR enforcement and compliance has been delegated to the companies.

In principle, LRCs are designed to favour marginalized indigenous groups and local communities, which are hosts to extractive projects.Footnote 6 Despite legal instruments, Nigeria has struggled to effectuate the duty to consult and integrate indigenous peoples in project monitoring and implementation. Consultation has become a particularly nuanced legal topic that implicates indigenous rights under constitutional law principles and the often-nuanced relationship between state versus federal powers.Footnote 7 This article uses “indigenous people” generically to include local communities that are hosts to extractive projects. In most circumstances, these communities are homogenous, with a unique demand that policy objectives are articulated to include them in consultation and participation paradigms.

After this introduction, that article discusses the concept of LCRs, contrasting them with state obligations under trade agreements or international treaties. It further contextualizes the discussions on how local content can create social inclusion in Nigeria's extractive industry. It then examines the legal and policy objectives of local content in Nigeria. It also investigates the sustainability of local content legislation in Nigeria and the role local content plays in effectuating a social licence to operate. This section of the article further highlights the provisions of specific legislation and policy, with a view to investigating a shared approach to the sustainability of LCRs. A conclusion follows.

THE INEVITABILITY OF LOCAL CONTENT REQUIREMENTS

“Local content” is understood in this article to encompass “local procurement, the employment of local and national people and goods and services (value addition) from local or national firms”.Footnote 8 Butler's statement can be understood to mean that, through local content outcomes, resource-rich communities are empowered politically, economically and socially in the ideological construct of adaptive globalism, thereby increasing their stake in extractive industries broadly, and particularly in the supply chain.

Initially, the prebendalist situation, in which most post-colonial African governments found themselves, led to a series of indigenization policies geared towards creating value-added outcomes for their citizens. These policies, couched in the form of structural adjustment programmes, generated governance vacuums.Footnote 9 In Africa's extractive sector, the adjustment programmes empowered multinational companies to dictate operational terms that were inimical to the progress and development of host states. Consequently, indigenous firms lost innovative creations, “access to research, development and skills development”,Footnote 10 to international firms, which coalesced around foreign extractive companies to supply goods and services. Local suppliers were left with the duty of service delivery, with less value-added content and progressive debility in infrastructural development and manufacturing. The challenge is whether obligatory LCRs lead to inadequacies and biases. The attendant effects of these neoliberalist agendas that precluded local contributions to project development gave African states the urge to craft policies that prioritize local content, over international trade rules that foster unfettered access to local markets. For example, one of the fundamental principles of the World Trade Organization (WTO) is the creation of a multilateral trading system, in which trade flows as efficiently and freely as possible. Scholars have argued that Nigeria's Local Content Act violates her national treatment and investment obligations under international treaties.Footnote 11 Arguably, LCRs could appear to violate Nigeria's obligations under WTO and trade-related agreements.Footnote 12 Balancing international economic order with domestic protectionist policies does not obviate any obligation under investment treaties. Indeed, the WTO permits certain exceptions in trade agreements to ensure states meet their obligations under international human rights law vis-à-vis trade obligations under international trade law. The idea is to achieve substantial equality, redressing the structural biases that lead to discrimination. For instance, article XX of the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT) allows states to deviate from trade agreements where such deviation will protect public morals, human,Footnote 13 animal or plant life or health.Footnote 14 Such protection gives states an opportunity to craft local content laws to meet the demands of the local populace. The WTO Agreement on Agriculture also furthers protection to local farmers, thereby deferring to local content, especially with regard to competition for land and the reallocation of resources. Despite the dictates of these trade agreements, each state should be able to determine its LCRs in accordance with its own scale of values and in the forms selected by it. The inclusion of human rights provisions in the Nigeria-Morocco bilateral trade agreement (Morocco-Nigeria BIT) creates a semblance of trade relations anchored on equity, justice and fairness.Footnote 15 The Morocco-Nigeria BIT contains several provisions that enshrine corporate social responsibility, human rights and deference to local content.Footnote 16 It obliges investors to carry out social, human and environmental impact assessments,Footnote 17 as well as complying with local laws and regulations, including LCRs.Footnote 18

Proponents of local content argue that failure to enhance LCRs weakens the social contract between the state and the people, resulting in destructive ethnic mobilization, economic predation and deep resentment from host communities to extractive projects.Footnote 19 Consequently, attendant socio-environmental impacts, lack of adequate participation and access to information, land expropriation without compensation and community distrust of state institutions heighten the possibility of resistance to resource projects.Footnote 20

Despite the enactment of local content policies in resource-rich African countries, such as Nigeria, foreign extractive companies continue to frustrate small and medium scale enterprises (SMEs) to the point of bankruptcy.Footnote 21 In some instances, small firms are encouraged to bid for tenders without any guarantee of timely payment in returnFootnote 22 and are expected to carry out work without any form of mobilization fee. This challenge transcends completion of the contract.Footnote 23 In addition, the procurement process is marred by corruption and there is no guarantee that the LCRs are actually observed. The implication is that severe human rights violations occur within the context of depriving locals of socio-economic variables. These variables necessitate the re-thinking of LCRs as a tool for “employment generation, supply chain development, technological and knowledge spillovers”.Footnote 24 This article adopts the view that practical local content policy objectives must fulfil certain key indices. First, in providing employment opportunities for local communities, businesses must include periodic training and knowledge transfers. This will ensure a reduction in unsatisfactory or incompetent skill levels. Secondly, supply chains must create avenues for local communities to be involved in businesses’ procurement needs. This extends to directing procurement contracts that favour SMEs. Thirdly, beneficiationFootnote 25 strategies must keep a certain production capacity at the local level, rather than outsourcing levels of production to developed countries. For example, the beneficiation of oil, gas and mining products in Nigeria has the potential to trigger employment opportunities, revenue and technology transfer, resulting in added value for local communities.Footnote 26 Thus, it is argued that LCRs stimulate a form of resource nationalism that creates resource wealth for the people. The next section discusses local content within the context of Nigeria's LCRs and the ramifications for resource management.

Contextualizing local content in Nigeria

Before the enactment of the Nigerian Oil and Gas Industry Content Development Act 2010, Nigeria relied heavily on foreign procurement of goods and services.Footnote 27 The reliance on foreign sourced materials and the attendant loss of income severely impacted the local economy. Despite the ingenuity of this act, the dissonance towards LCRs is hinged on the fact that local communities believe that their voices are not heard and respected in the decision-making process, as well as on the lack of procedural fairness in contract awarding and project management.Footnote 28 Local communities’ confidence in governance and regulatory approaches is dependent on the belief that these approaches and statutory arrangements are efficient in safeguarding positive extractive resource development. Extractive companies risk sanctions and penalties if they refuse or neglect to activate these LCRs, threatening government intervention where necessary. The intervention of government architecture usually erodes trust in the companies.

The tortious history surrounding the dilemma of local content policies and the recent escalation of oil and gas pricesFootnote 29 have again ignited the fear of potentially violent resistance, instigated by environmental degradation and the inequitable distribution of benefits from extraction.Footnote 30 A few examples suffice. First, shortly after the amalgamation of Nigeria's Northern and Southern protectorates, the industrial protests between local mine workers and “foreign” workers started at the Enugu State government-owned colliery, which opened in 1915 at Udi and in 1917 at Iva Valley and Obwetti.Footnote 31 The mines operated from a territory historically associated with slavery, shifts in demographics and changes in local politics. According to Brown,Footnote 32 the mines assembled a mix of voluntary workforce, unskilled contract workers, clerical workers and artisans. The disparities in the competence level of the workforce led to a string of protests between, on the one hand, those who considered themselves “traditional rural peasants” who lived close to the mines and, on the other hand, the more knowledgeable “foreigners” who lived farther away from the mines and were considered to be exploiters. The contours of this incident brought to bear the extent to which those considered “local” can assert their rights against exploiters, even if they were considered the same nationality. Secondly, residents of Ihietutu community in Ebonyi State staged a peaceful protest against Eglone Group Ltd, a multinational corporation, relating to its mining operations.Footnote 33 The resilient community not only stopped the mining activities but also successfully prevented the company from further mining activities due to its non-compliance with the terms of the lease signed with the host community. Thirdly, the Nigerian government banned mining activities in Zamfara State, due to the unregulated artisanal mining activities of gold and lead in the community.Footnote 34 These activities have resulted in numerous deaths, kidnappings and other social evils.Footnote 35 Today, Ogoni community, home to extended Shell exploration activities, has prohibited Shell (and any other company) from extractive activities on its land. Shell Nigeria closed its oil facility in Bonny Island, Rivers StateFootnote 36 due to insecurity and threats to livelihood. ExxonMobil also shut down its Qua Iboe terminal on 19 May 2016 due to militant threats.Footnote 37

Certainly, these incidents results from the unequal distribution of income from extractive resources. As a response to these conflicts, Nigeria and other stakeholders devised initiatives to enhance the equitable distribution of benefits from extractives and promote less hazardous resource extraction. Initially, the government enhanced greater inclusion of the local community in decision-making processes. Subsequently, foreign extractive companies sought to enhance their transparency through corporate social responsibility practices as a way of engaging more with local communities.Footnote 38 One of the pathways towards delivery of inclusive growth is the enactment of the local content law.Footnote 39 This presupposes that local communities are prioritized in terms of employment, procurement and beneficiation strategy.Footnote 40

LEGAL AND POLICY OBJECTIVES OF LOCAL CONTENT IN NIGERIA

Local content in Nigeria's extractive industry

Unquestionably, Nigeria is the largest producer of oil and gas in Africa.Footnote 41 From the available data, Nigeria's oil industry accounts for about 92 per cent of its total exports, generating a value equivalent to 70 per cent of its revenue.Footnote 42 Despite the high turnover from the proceeds of oil resources, there have been concerns and debates as to whether such proceeds benefit the populace.Footnote 43 In part, questions have been raised regarding the value of proceeds from oil production in terms of taxes, royalties and fees, and whether the local community benefits from the presence of international oil and gas operators through procurement, employment and the delivery of social services.Footnote 44 Furthermore, local workforces have been increasingly vulnerable because of the nature of their work.Footnote 45 In some instances, what remains of unionized worker cohesion and solidarity has evoked conflict at the local level, as workers mobilize for greater equity in the global value chains in which they hold the most precarious positions.

Nigeria has committed to addressing some of these teething problems through the adaptation of some intervention frameworks.Footnote 46 For instance, the Nigerian Oil and Gas Industry Content Development Act 2010 (NOGICDA) aims to increase indigenous participation in the oil and gas industry by prescribing minimum standards for the use of local services and materials, and promoting the transfer of technology and skills to Nigerian labour in the industry. The act was designed not only to guarantee preference for local operators in the award of oil blocks and contract projects,Footnote 47 but also demands that oil and gas companies give preference to locally manufactured products and equipment when such products and equipment are comparable to their international counterparts.Footnote 48 International oil companies are obliged to: promote education; transfer skills, technology, and research and development; and meet the set minimum technology requirements for training indigenous companies on how to participate better in the oil and gas industry.Footnote 49 Here, states must work closely with universities, research institutes and extractive firms to develop specific types of skills, particularly in cutting-edge technologies utilized by firms. Companies are better suited to meet local demands when there is a deliberate integration of social and environmental interests in their business operations and interactions with stakeholders. In essence, ethical responsibility, which transcends mere compliance with legal requirements, ensures that companies respect a community's social needs and ethical norms.

To interact better with the local community, Kemp proposes four models for corporations to adapt to be able to engage actively with the community.Footnote 50 The first involves interacting with the community through formulating and disseminating information to stakeholders. For instance, local suppliers’ capabilities must be periodically assessed to ensure they are able to keep up with the supply chain, with training given to local suppliers to enable them to respond effectively to complex tenders. The second model entails identifying possible risks and ways to counteract negative publicity. The challenge with extractive projects in weak zones is that details about the projects are shrouded in secrecy, allowing for speculation. Transparency, reporting requirements and enforcement mechanisms are usually missing from publicly available information, thereby leading to undesirable publicity for the company. The third model advocates better dialogue between the company and the local community, taking into consideration people with lesser power. Consultation and meaningful engagement provide a basis for the provision of clear, accurate and timely information to locals in respect of potential impacts on their community. To fulfil the right to participate, local communities must be able to express their views freely and fairly, without any form of coercion, manipulation or use of force. This is the trademark of LCR compliance. The fourth model focuses on taking advantage of the people's input during decision-making.

The first two models are usually used by companies when interacting with the local community, whereas the latter two are rarely practised as they are more nuanced. These models create systems that enhance the understanding of the local community's interests, building bridges between the community and the company: a pathway to attaining a social licence to operate (SLO). Thus, adopting the models maximizes profits for all stakeholders and facilitates organizational change, supporting the interaction between the company and the community during the decision-making process.Footnote 51 An SLO enables the local community and other stakeholders slowly to trust a company and its operations. In return, the company operates responsibly by guaranteeing environmental sustainability and employment generation for the local community. Businesses that obtain legal licences through concessions are only certain to utilize the licence if local content measures exist.Footnote 52

Local content legislation in Nigeria's extractive industry

Nigerian local content initiatives require “an exhaustive systemic approach that would assess local content levels, identify constraints, develop clear policies and processes to stimulate growth, and clearly define the roles and responsibilities of stakeholders”.Footnote 53 Nigeria introduced laws and policies governing local content requirements that will ensure foreign companies give preference to local products and citizens, while procuring goods and services to be used in the extractive industry. The evolution of local content rules in Nigeria has had a tortuous history. For instance, in 2006, Nigeria introduced a comprehensive local content policy that failed to achieve “local participation due to lack of enforceability” in the extractive industry.Footnote 54 An examination of the sustainability of subsequent local content policies follows.

Nigerian Minerals and Mining Act: In Nigeria's mining sector, the Nigerian Minerals and Mining Act 2007 (NMMA) regulates the exploration and exploitation of solid materials in Nigeria. Section 1(1) of the act vests all land, property and control of all mineral resources within Nigeria's contiguous continental shelf in the government. In administering the act, the minister for solid minerals must ensure the sustainable development of Nigeria's mineral resources.Footnote 55 This development extends to compliance with community development agreements (CDAs), which is a major strength of the NMMA.Footnote 56 In exploiting minerals, there is an equitable balance between foreign and indigenous interests.Footnote 57 Furthermore, the minister is to initiate investment-friendly local content measures for mining projectsFootnote 58 and facilitate the development of indigenous technical and professional manpower necessary for mining.Footnote 59

Importantly, the NMMA requires a CDA between the mineral title holder and the host community. The essence of a CDA is for mine lessees to enter into a binding agreement with their host community for the purpose of guaranteeing the delivery of social and economic benefits to the community.Footnote 60 The provision of social and economic benefits extends to ensuring education, employment, support for and development of SMEs.Footnote 61 The CDA is subjected to a five-year periodic review, providing a platform for consultative and monitoring frameworks between the host community and mineral title holder. As a condition precedent before any extractive project commences, the CDA provides a valuable framework for exploration minerals in Nigeria, with particular reference to local content realities. The enforceability of CDAs makes them a veritable tool in the realization of LCRs.Footnote 62

Nigeria Oil and Gas Industry Content Development Act: The NOGICDA defines “Nigerian content” to be a “quantum of composite value added to or created in the Nigerian economy by a systematic development of capacity and capabilities through the deliberate utilization of Nigerian human, material resources and services in the Nigerian oil and gas industry”.Footnote 63 Under the NOGICDA, while compliance with LCRs forms a major criterion for the award of a licence to operate,Footnote 64 the act explicitly obligates all regulators and operators in the oil and gas industry to give preference to Nigerian content in executing their operations.Footnote 65 The act gives first consideration to Nigerian independent operators when awarding oil blocks, licences and other projects in the industry. In fact, exclusive consideration is granted to Nigerian indigenous operators that own equipment necessary to operate on land and in swamp oil areas.Footnote 66 The act obliges an operator to craft a content plan detailing how the project will promote local content.Footnote 67 Under the act, the Content Development and Monitoring Board (Monitoring Board) has the discretion to conduct a public review for such a plan. This is important for a variety of reasons. For example, a community relying heavily on a company for water, roads and schools might create a false narrative of LCR enforcement, even though the employment of locals is minimal or non-existent. Extractive industries’ operational sites are often situated in spaces close to local people.Footnote 68 Furthermore, their projects sometimes infringe on a local community's places of cultural attachment, spiritual affinity and emotional importance. Where this is not settled diplomatically, locals could develop an ownership stigma of resisting extractive projects. To prevent these infringements, the NOGICDA requires an operator to submit to the Monitoring Board a list detailing how Nigerian content has been met in the execution of a contract.Footnote 69 Furthermore, an operator is expected to submit to the Monitoring Board a succession plan for all positions not held by Nigerians and a detailed plan for how Nigerians will understudy each incumbent expatriate for a period not exceeding four years so that, at the end of the four years, the position will be domesticated, that is, occupied by a qualified Nigerian.Footnote 70

Failure to recognize LCRs could lead to a range of marginalization: political, economic, social exclusion and cultural. If adequate protection is not guaranteed under local content laws, marginalized communities might not understand the technicalities of extractive projects. Discrimination on the basis of ethnicity, gender or group has deep-seated untoward consequences. Communities that have been promised good jobs and development may be trusting of companies that engage in inadequate corporate social responsibility rather than an integrated form of local content.

The Petroleum Industry Act: On 16 August 2021, President Muhammadu Buhari signed the Petroleum Industry Act 2021 (PIA) into law. This comprehensive and holistic act regulates the financial, administrative and operational activities of the petroleum industry. The PIA seeks to “create efficient and effective governing institutions”,Footnote 71 and facilitate transparency and accountability, good governance, and sustainable administration of the petroleum industry.Footnote 72 The PIA effectively repeals the Associated Gas Reinjection Act 1979,Footnote 73 while some laws will continue to apply until the expiry of any licences and oil mining leases granted under them:Footnote 74 the Petroleum Act, Oil Pipelines Act and Petroleum Profit Tax Act.Footnote 75 Subject to certain exemptions, these laws will continue to apply as if they had been issued by the Nigerian Upstream Regulatory Commission (the Commission) or Nigerian Midstream and Downstream Petroleum Regulatory Authority (the Authority) under the PIA, unless they are revoked or replaced by an amendment to the PIA.Footnote 76 The PIA is instructive for LCRs in several ways. First, section 234 of the PIA provides socio-economic benefits from petroleum activities to host communities.Footnote 77 The act also promotes a robust, peaceful, and harmonious relationship between operators and host communities. It establishes an operational level grievance mechanism to settle disputes between project proponents and host communities.Footnote 78 Furthermore, section 235 introduces the requirement for host community development trusts for the benefit of host communities. These trusts are designed to finance infrastructure developments, accelerate economic opportunities and promote the sustainable development of host communities.Footnote 79 Each project promoter must make an annual contribution of 3 per cent of its annual operating expenditure in the preceding financial year to the relevant trust.Footnote 80 Project operators have 12 months to establish a trust.Footnote 81 Contributions are to be applied for the “development of the economic and social infrastructure” of the host community.Footnote 82 This is intended to safeguard the interests of host communities and encourage transparency and accountability in the operations of the industry. However, there are concerns from stakeholders, especially local communities, whether the 3 per cent operating expense allocated to host communities is adequate and whether it is more than the 30 per cent profit share to be used for exploratory development in the “frontier basins”.Footnote 83 Comparatively, the 30 per cent profit share for oil exploration in the frontier basins is about USD 400 million per annum,Footnote 84 while the 3 per cent allocated to host communities represents approximately USD 500 million annually.Footnote 85 Secondly, within one year or six months after the grant of a licence or lease respectively, licensees or lessees operating in the upstream and midstream petroleum sector must submit to the Commission an environmental management plan in respect of the projects that require environmental impact assessment.Footnote 86 This plan is expected to contain the licensee's written environmental policy, objectives and targets, and commitments to comply with relevant laws, regulations and guidelines. The plan should also investigate, assess and evaluate the impact of the licensee's proposed activities on the environment. It is also the responsibility of the licensee or lessee to rehabilitate and manage negative impacts of the project on the environment. Thirdly, in addition to the PIA's objectives, which are anchored on transparency, efficiency, sustainable development and good governance accountability, section 83 broadly provides for the full discourse of information on contracts, licences and leases with the Nigerian National Petroleum Company. Such contractual information must be provided to the Commission and published on the Commission's website within one year of the licence or lease being granted.Footnote 87

The PIA preserves certain laws, subsidiary legislation and regulations otherwise repealed by the PIA, in so far as they are not inconsistent with the PIA. These laws, regulations and directions will continue to operate as if they had been issued by the Commission or Authority until revoked or amended by the PIA.Footnote 88 The PIA vests ownership of all petroleum resources and the resultant revenue in the federal government.Footnote 89 Granting the state exclusive ownership over natural resources could, however, hamper the state-corporate-community relationship, as the debate continues over who owns natural resources.Footnote 90 Under the Petroleum Act, the minister makes regulations and provides generally for “matters relating to licenses and leases granted under the Act”.Footnote 91 Such matters could include “safe working, the prevention of pollution of water courses and the atmosphere, and the making of reports and returns (including the reporting of accidents) and inquiries into accidents”.Footnote 92 The act does not specifically include the local community in the granting of oil and mining leases, but the PIA subjects the minister's actions to oversight by the Commission. One critical challenge is determining the mechanisms through which local participation in decision-making can enhance legitimacy. There is a disconnect between corporate actors and the local community. To guarantee the effectiveness of LCRs, local actors must be involved in policy decisions.Footnote 93 Furthermore, any licensed company must be required to incorporate and provide for due diligence requirements and a human rights impact assessment. Furthermore, the Petroleum (Drilling and Production) Regulations 1969 require human rights content, which makes local community participation and consultation imperative before any oil prospecting or mining activity starts. Section 1(2)(h) of these regulations, which provides for the employment quota of Nigerians in the oil and gas industry, should be amended to enhance the position of the community local to the extractive activity.

National Petroleum Policy 2017: As obliged under the NMMA, the minister of petroleum resources published two policy documents: the National Gas PolicyFootnote 94 and the National Petroleum Policy.Footnote 95 Both documents are geared towards positive development outcomes for Nigeria. The main purpose of the National Petroleum Policy is for Nigeria to be a nation “where hydrocarbons are used as a fuel for national economic growth and not simply as a source of income”.Footnote 96 One of its objectives includes minimizing environmental degradation in pursuit of oil exploration in the country.Footnote 97 With particular reference to local content, the policy provides for the inclusion of local communities in infrastructure, social and petroleum developments in the Niger Delta area.Footnote 98 The government will also focus on human capital development as a means of increasing local content.Footnote 99 The policy also aims to overhaul the procurement process, award marginal fields to indigenous people and develop human capital to further increase local content.Footnote 100 For so long as these remain policy documents, not enactments of the National Assembly, their progressive realization and enforcement remain in doubt. Indeed, they have not been recognized by the courts.Footnote 101

Sustainability of local content legislation: Myth or reality?

Under Nigeria's Constitution 1999 (the Constitution), the administration of mining activities (including oil and gas) falls under federal authority.Footnote 102 By design, LCRs provide for the general duty to consult host communities to extractive projects. Consequently, government policies and objectives are geared towards incentivizing technological innovations, expanding economic benefits and minimizing or mitigating probable adverse impacts on local populations. Thus, certain provisions construe local content to mean policies aimed at the interests of host communities and “develop[ing] the socio-economic conditions of historically disadvantaged citizens”.Footnote 103

In the Niger Delta, for instance, local content is derived from the adequacy and quality of the consultation process before the project contract was concluded. Hence, project developers are obliged to provide detailed and adequate information on their consultation with the local community during the environmental assessment process.Footnote 104 The extent of the consultation depends on the type of project. For example, a project might affect indigenous land used for spiritual purposes.Footnote 105 The obligation to consult is embedded in the twin principles of legal and social licence to operate, and the protection of fundamental rights under the Constitution.Footnote 106 The implication is that the “duty to consult” must be carried out in good faith and utmost integrity, strengthening the corporate-community nexus and shared value system so that companies can operate without hinderance or rejection by the local community. Furthermore, responsibility for the duty to consult is incumbent upon all parties: the state, corporation and community. For example, companies are obliged to ensure that any information on an ongoing project is readily available and easily accessible to the host communities. This is in line with Kemp's model.Footnote 107 It also entails preventing, avoiding, mitigating and addressing any concerns raised by the host communities before a project commences.Footnote 108

Critics of participatory development have noted how this concept can lead to a biased and illegitimate exercise of power, thereby creating a sort of hegemony.Footnote 109 Cook and Kothari argue that empowering local communities to participate in the extraction and development of resources may turn out to be tantamount, in Foucaultian terms, to subjection, in the sense that communities become embroiled in strategies that ultimately empower companies, even though they are presented as favourable to communities.Footnote 110 While it can be a form of political control,Footnote 111 a participatory approach essentially does not epitomize the de-politicization of development. Rather, it opens up a continuous process of engagement with key stakeholders.Footnote 112 The key question is how to embolden a more all-encompassing, participatory approach in decision-making processes, which takes into cognizance the multiplicity of viewpoints on environmental issues.

To secure the social legitimacy of corporate actors, it is the expectation that these actors contact host communities through their elected leadership and inform the community of proposed projects. Thus, to ensure maximum participation and information-sharing, host communities must be given relevant information at appropriate fora and businesses must address any concerns or questions they raise. These concerns include human rights violations, the extent of local participation in project execution, and employment generation and procurement. The desire for local content policies is anchored on the need to provide full information and disclosure to those who will be impacted by a project, giving these stakeholders an opportunity to recognize concerns that might arise, opening the way to developing commitments in response to local input and, in most cases, addressing real concerns rather than regulatory procedures. Moreover, consultation in the Niger Delta reveals a two-way community / company communication process and project plan that is tailored to the local context.

The duty to consult with local communities is fundamental to the environmental assessment process under the Environmental Assessment Act. Businesses are obliged to include all relevant stakeholders in the planning, signing and execution process so that their concerns are known and addressed before irreversible evaluations and actions are made. It is important to add that deference to a negotiated strategy with host communities gives rise to the importance of a global memorandum of association, commonly used in Nigeria. These memoranda are negotiated contracts between companies and host communities.Footnote 113 Due to their private nature, it is difficult to ascertain the extent of inclusionary strategies, such as adequate consultation, employment opportunities and continuous training.

The inherent weakness in Nigeria's approach to LCRs is evident in the fact that foreign investors do not have to commit to keep the head office of their Nigerian business in Nigeria. Apart from the provision that a non-Nigerian may invest and participate in the operation of any enterprise in Nigeria,Footnote 114 there is no requirement in respect of the headquarters of a foreign enterprise in Nigeria for the purpose of safeguarding local content.Footnote 115 To further strengthen LCRs in Nigeria, requirements for continuous hiring, “infusion of capital” in local businesses and stiff penalties against dismissals or redundancies, are imperative.Footnote 116 Arguably, foreign companies in Nigeria have stymied SMEs, depriving them of the necessary education and training to bid for complex tenders, as well as support mechanisms to thrive in supply chains.Footnote 117 Nigeria can progressively realize the potential inherent in local content laws by ensuring that foreign enterprises see their partnership with local suppliers as a joint venture arrangement rather than a superior-inferior contractual arrangement. This will, undoubtedly, safeguard the local supply chain so that it benefits from the local content policies. For example, while local content law in Nigeria aims to reduce the proportion of expatriates in the senior management of companies, there is contention about the lack of enforcement of the law and the corrupt tendencies of state agencies.Footnote 118 The law should go further. A larger percentage of senior executives of foreign businesses operating in Nigeria must constitute Nigerians. Furthermore, foreign investors must satisfy the government that any investment will be of “net benefit to Nigeria”. Satisfaction of this requirement would be evident in employment quotas, the degree of participation of Nigerians in a business, and the effect of investment on productivity, technological development and product innovation.

The determination of LCRs has the potential to generate varied approaches to extractive resource governance. First, while LCRs improve contributory legitimacy through responsiveness to local concerns,Footnote 119 they also have the capability to generate productive legitimacy, through policy orientation and enhancement that work effectively and resonate with citizens’ “ideals, values and identity”.Footnote 120 A proactive and practical realization of LCRs increases the level of corporate legitimacy and guarantees an SLO, as citizens consider themselves to be in a position of control and influence over project execution. This is more important when corporate decisions are made that incorporate citizens’ participation, which leads to “better (or worse) environmental outcomes”.Footnote 121 Besides, LCR objectives guarantee that skill transfers are better adapted to local socio-economic, cultural and political realities. In other words, if people realize that policy objectives inculcate a joint or shared approach to development, then people will demand that any business is considered a joint effort and not a business versus community situation. A non-realizable LCR can activate public resistance and resentment against policy proposals.

It is important to note that sustainably crafted legislation, without productive and progressive realization, will be futile.Footnote 122 Factors that impede this realization range from expensive litigation processes, protectionist policies, citizenship awareness,Footnote 123 and conflict between local communities and extractive companies, resulting in numerous remonstrations and protests.Footnote 124 While Nigeria is not immune to these challenges, the enactment of LCRs as legally enforceable documents could offer potential benefits to local industries. They would also provide the basis for economic diversification,Footnote 125 thereby increasing the chances of Nigeria being able to withstand future oil price volatility, as has been evident in recent times.Footnote 126

CONCLUSION

Despite its progressive nature, the local content policy on value creation in the Nigerian oil sector is uncertain. Examining the efficiency of local content polices is indispensable to realizing considerable local added value. The state and investors must comply with LCRs, providing the public and private sectors with adequate investment in skills training and development.Footnote 127 Extractive companies must communicate with local communities and other stakeholders about disparities in requests for labour at different stages of an extractive project. This will create some degree of trust between investors and local communities.

State-investor responsibility here denotes that trust allows investors to operate without hindrance. Thus, communities must be included in project monitoring and evaluation, open and transparent disclosure mechanisms, and effective community participation, including women and vulnerable community members. There is no doubt that these will reduce the recurring remonstrations between communities and extractive companies, and cultivate a sustainable relationship that advances mutual trust among stakeholders.Footnote 128

The lack of local community consultation and participation in resource contract negotiations and the decision-making process between state and investors is disturbing. For instance, Nigeria's extractive laws do not provide any role for local communities in the decision-making process. Despite the ingenuity of the environmental impact assessment and other laws, they fall far short of the needed dogmatic approach to LCRs. First, while they guarantee that deference should be shown to citizens in project execution, they do not indicate whether local interests should be given more input during the development process or determine when it is appropriate to stop development when those interests become threatened. A heightened “power of veto” will ensure that the influence of local actors in project management will inevitably lead to a perception that extractive projects, for example, are positive. Where local actors do not see an increased role, this triggers resentment and remonstrations against any development project. Consequently, the legitimacy of LCRs is hinged on the premise that apparent levels of power in decision-making processes and the scope of engagement of local communities are crucial in supporting and legitimizing any developmental project. Amassing investment in the “local democratization of decision-making” will generate the possibility for host communities to expand their participatory control, resulting in effective LCR policies and regulations.

Obtaining an SLO guarantees the sharing of values and benefits at local and national levels. For instance, a contract between host communities and extractive companies in the form of a global memorandum of association, impact benefit agreement or community development agreement, creates a relationship between stakeholders, integrates local experiences, and offers the public opportunities to provide their views and reactions to ongoing projects. Corporate-community extractive investments create a shared value system and effective partnerships for local stakeholder development. The local community's participation is indispensable to understanding the local context. Citizens must lead their own development and build their own institutions. When participation fails, the community is left with no choice but to resist any projects that may be sited on their land. Consequently, encouraging local community participation reduces conflict in the resource zones.

Comprehensive consultation continues to be a herculean task for most local communities in Nigeria. This is due to leadership structures that are characterized by power struggles, making it difficult for companies to engage with community leaders. Linked to this is the fact that key community stakeholders are deprived of involvement in the participatory process, due in part to cultural hegemonic structures. Well designed and implemented LCRs are catalysts for structural development. To achieve the sustainable development of its extractive sector, Nigeria must devise a resolute state-led effort and determination to stimulate economic growth and development.

CONFLICTS OF INTEREST

None

Footnotes

*

PhD (Cape Town). Lecturer in law, Huddersfield Business School, University of Huddersfield; research associate, Centre for Comparative Law in Africa, Faculty of Law, University of Cape Town, South Africa. The author gives special thanks to the anonymous reviewers.

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14 See also: General Agreement on Trade in Services, art XIV; Plurilateral Agreement on Government Procurement, art XX111; and Agreement on Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights, art 27.2.

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18 See id, art 24(1). See also id, arts 17 (anti-corruption) and 19 (corporate governance and practices). LCRs can be justified under the Agreement on Trade-Related Investment Measures, art IV, which permits developing countries, such as Nigeria, to deviate temporarily from national treatment obligations.

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35 Ibid.

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38 See the French “duty of vigilance” law, Law No 2017-399 (27 March 2017), which creates a broad responsibility to prevent human rights and environmental impacts by companies of a certain size. The law also regulates activities of parent companies and their subsidiaries, suppliers and subcontractors wherever they are located. See also the UK's Modern Slavery Act 2015.

39 See for instance, Nigerian Oil and Gas Industry Content Development Act, secs 13 and 30.

40 As of September 2019, despite its oil and gas wealth, Nigeria recorded one of the world's highest unemployment rates, at 23.1%. To tackle the issue of unemployment, Nigeria must increase employment by at least 4%, which translates as a minimum of 3 million new jobs annually. See further, “Services sector holds key to tackling unemployment challenge - PwC” (PwC press release, 4 June 2018), available at: <https://www.pwc.com/ng/en/press-room/services-sector-holds-key-to-tackling-unemployment-challenge---p.html> (last accessed 8 November 2021). See also “Nigeria unemployment rate” Trading Economics, available at: <https://tradingeconomics.com/nigeria/unemployment-rate> (last accessed 8 November 2021).

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44 Ibid.

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46 See O Abe “The feasibility of implementing the United Nations Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights in the extractive industry in Nigeria” (2016) Journal of Sustainable Development Law and Policy 137. Some initiatives have called for more openness and transparency in extractive resource management. For instance, the Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative (EITI) is a multi-stakeholder approach that promotes openness, transparency and accountability in the management of natural resources in the decision-making process. Member states are obliged to disclose information on tax payments, licences and contracts. Nigeria not only signed the initiative, but enacted the EITI Act 2007 to pave the way for the initiative to be implemented. The Publish What You Pay coalition aims to promote transparency. It was launched in Nigeria in 2004, facilitating the implementation of the EITI process. The Open Government Partnership (OGP) is a multilateral partnership that aims to “secure concrete commitments from governments to promote transparency, empower citizens, fight corruption, and harness new technologies to strengthen governance”; Nigeria is currently implementing 14 commitments from the OGP Nigeria National Action Plan (2017–19), which is available at: <https://www.opengovpartnership.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/05/Nigeria_NAP_2017-2019.pdf> (last accessed 8 November 2021). The Natural Resource Charter is a set of principles designed for civil society and government, and details the best approach for harnessing the opportunities created by extractive resource governance. It is generally prescriptive and indicates what can make countries successful in terms of positively managing their extractive resources. It is available at: <https://resourcegovernance.org/approach/natural-resource-charter> (last accessed 8 November 2021). Other initiatives include the: UN Global Compact, available at: <https://www.unglobalcompact.org> (last accessed 8 November 2021); and OECD Guidelines for Multinational Enterprises (2011), available at: <https://www.oecd.org/daf/inv/mne/48004323.pdf> (last accessed 8 November 2021).

47 NOGICDA, sec 3(1).

48 Id, secs 10 and 12.

49 Id, secs 37 and 40(1).

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58 NMMA, sec 4(q).

59 Id, sec 4(r). Id, sec 19 creates a Mineral Resources and Environmental Management Committee that advises the minister on community human rights infringement, including pollution and land degradation.

60 Id, sec 116. See further Abe and Ordor “Local content requirements”, above at note 1.

61 Abe and Ordor, id at 394.

62 Ekhator, ERegulating the activities of oil multinationals in Nigeria: A case for self-regulation” (2016) 60/1 Journal of African Law 1CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

63 NOGICDA, sec 106.

64 Atsegbua “The Nigerian Oil and Gas Industry”, above at note 27 at 481. See also id, sec 3(3).

65 C Nwapi, C Ezeigbo and O Oke “Developments in beneficial ownership disclosure in the extractive industries in Nigeria” (2021) 8/1 The Extractive Industries and Society 443.

66 See NOGICDA, secs 2 and 3.

67 Id, secs 4 and 12.

68 Conde and Billon “Why do some communities”, above note 4 at 683. See further id, sec 27.

69 Id, sec 24.

70 Id, sec 32.

71 PIA, sec 2.

72 Ibid.

73 Id, sec 310.

74 See further id, sec 311(9).

75 Also included is any subsidiary regulation made under any of these laws and the laws will remain in operation until they are repealed or revoked under the PIA.

76 See PIA, sec 311(1).

77 The Nigerian Constitution provides that 13% of the revenue from the federation account is paid to oil-producing states.

78 PIA, sec 234.

79 Id, sec 239.

80 Id, sec 240.

81 Id, sec 236.

82 Id, sec 239.

83 See id, sec 9, providing that at least 30% of the profit generated by the proposed Nigerian National Petroleum Company Limited will be allocated to oil exploration in the “frontier basins”. K Oyero “3% to host communities more than 30% profit share for oil exploration in Sokoto, others - Kyari” (24 August 2021) Punch, available at: <https://punchng.com/3-to-host-communities-more-than-30-profit-share-for-oil-exploration-in-sokoto-others-kyari/?utm_medium=Social&utm_source=Facebook&fbclid=IwAR3bOh-dY0Cgf4NHckSCcgRxLIfWT3zx8gV8F3Jv6VUc-IcoMJBXiE5oJ3M#Echobox=1629822277> (last accessed 8 November 2021).

84 Frontier basins include the Chad Basin, Gongola Basin, Sokoto Basin, Dahomey Basin, Bida Basin, Benue Trough and Anambra Basin.

85 See note 83 above.

86 PIA, sec 102.

87 See generally id, sec 83.

88 Id, sec 311. The Petroleum Act 1969 is one such law.

89 PIA, sec 1.

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91 Petroleum Act, sec 9(1)(b)(iii).

92 Ibid.

93 See SC Jagers et al “The impact of local participation on community support for natural resource management: The case of mining in northern Canada and northern Sweden” (2018) 9 Arctic Review on Law and Politics 124.

94 This policy was approved on 28 June 2017.

95 This policy was approved on 19 July 2017.

96 “The National Petroleum Policy (NPP)” (August 2017, KPMG), available at: <https://assets.kpmg/content/dam/kpmg/ng/pdf/tax/ng-the-national-petroleum-policy.pdf> (last accessed 8 November 2021).

97 Ibid.

98 Ibid.

99 Ibid.

100 Ibid.

101 See Union Bank of Nigeria Plc and Another v Ifeoluwa Nigeria Enterprises Ltd [2006] LCN/2055 (CA); D Olawuyi and Z Tubodenyefa “Review of the Environmental Guidelines and Standards for the Petroleum Industry in Nigeria (EGASPIN)” (2018, OGEES Institute, Afe Babalola University, Ado Ekiti, Nigeria).

102 See Constitution, sched II, item 39.

103 “Local content policies”, above at note 6 at 8.

104 Environmental Impact Assessment Act 1992, sec 2.

105 Id, sec 2(2)(b).

106 See N Echefu and E Akpofure “Environmental impact assessment in Nigeria: Regulatory background and procedural framework” in UNEP EIA Training Resource Manual (Law, policy and institutional arrangements) 63, available at: <https://www.iaia.org/pdf/case-studies/EIANigeria.pdf> (last accessed 8 November 2021).

107 Kemp et al “Just relations and companies”, above at note 51.

108 Ibid.

109 B Cooke and U Kothari (eds) Participation: The New Tyranny? (2001, Zed Books).

110 Ibid.

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113 E Oshionebo “Community development agreements as tools for local participation in natural resource projects in Africa” in I Feichtner, M Krajewski and R Roesch (eds) Human Rights in the Extractive Industries: Transparency, Participation, Resistance (2019, Springer Publishing) 77. They are also referred to as impact benefit agreements or community development agreements.

114 See Nigerian Investment Promotion Commission Act 1995, secs 17 and 20.

115 Companies and Allied Matters Act 1990 (CAMA), secs 36 and 547. CAMA generally requires a foreign company to be incorporated as a separate entity and have an established place of business in Nigeria. See further id, secs 54, 56 and 547.

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117 Eboh “Local content, local troubles”, above at note 21.

118 C Houeland “Casualisation and conflict in the Niger Delta: Nigerian oil workers’ unions between companies and communities” (2015) 224 Third World Review 25.

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120 Jagers et al “The impact of local participation”, above at note 93 at 127.

121 J Newig, E Challies and NW Jager “The environmental performance of participatory and collaborative governance: A framework of causal mechanisms” (2018) 46/2 Policy Studies Journal 269 at 269.

122 See generally I Ramdoo Designing Local Content Policies in Mineral-Rich Countries (2018, Intergovernmental Forum on Mining, Minerals, Metals and Sustainable Development), available at: <https://www.iisd.org/sites/default/files/publications/local-content-policies-mineral-rich-countries.pdf> (last accessed 8 November 2021).

123 D Stonehouse “Canada's oilfield services exporters need to be aware of local content rules when targeting new markets” (11 July 2018) JWN Energy, available at: <https://www.jwnenergy.com/article/2018/7/11/canadas-oilfield-services-exporters-need-be-aware-/> (last accessed 8 November 2021).

124 G Hufbauer and JJ Schott Local Content Requirements: A Global Problem (2013, Peterson Institute Press).

125 R Hart and D Hoogeveen “Introduction to the legal framework for mining in Canada” (18 July 2012) MiningWatch, Canada, available at: <https://miningwatch.ca/publications/2012/7/18/introduction-legal-framework-mining-canada> (last accessed 8 November 2021, noting the procedure on how communities and indigenous people are consulted about mineral developments, and where consent is recognized.

126 JS Ovadia “Is natural resource-based development still realistic for Africa?” (10 February 2016), available at: <https://www.e-ir.info/2016/02/10/is-natural-resource-based-development-still-realistic-for-africa/> (last accessed 8 November 2021).

127 “Public-private dialogue for specific sectors: Extractive industries” (World Bank Group Nuts & Bolts technical guidance), available at: <http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/444581504190566893/pdf/119240-BRI-PUBLIC-6p-IFCICNutsBoltsPPDExtractivedigital.pdf> (last accessed 8 November 2021).

128 Gorski, JSocial licence to operate (SLO) in the extractive and energy sectors: Introduction” (2020) 18/1 Oil, Gas and Energy Law 1Google Scholar.