The Nigerian oil and gas sector has lifted in-country participation from below 5% before the 2010 NOGICD Act to over 61% today, a shift the Nigerian Content Development and Monitoring Board (NCDMB) links to more than $20 billion in in-country investment. As Nigeria positions itself for a fresh wave of upstream activity, the question is no longer whether local content works, but how to sustain its momentum. That is the focus of the Nigerian Content Seminar, which opens the 25th edition of NOG Energy Week in July 2026, under the theme, “Shaping the Next Phase of Local Content Growth.”
The figures mark both an achievement and a turning point, a shift that the seminar is convened to examine. The early phase of the Nigerian content journey was built on redirecting industry spend toward Nigerian firms and growing their share of contracts. The next phase demands more: deepening the engineering, manufacturing and operational expertise that indigenous companies need to build, run and maintain the increasingly complex assets now entering the project pipeline, without leaning on imported technology and talent.
Nowhere is that test sharper than offshore, where recent final investment decisions, from Shell’s $2 billion HI Field to the $5 billion Bonga North deepwater project, point to where the next investment cycle sits. Indigenous firms have moved up the value chain in fabrication, marine services and project delivery; how fast that capacity scales to match the pipeline is a question the seminar will weigh.










