TITLE:
The Potentials of ADR for Corporate Remediation in the Midstream and Downstream Petroleum Sector of Nigeria
AUTHORS:
Okwudili Onyenwee Onwurah, Noble Ik Obialor, Nonyelum Doris Agusiobo, Uchenna Peter Igwe, Uchenna Emmanuel Mgboji
KEYWORDS:
ADR, BHR, Non-Judicial Grievance Mechanism (NJGM), Corporate Remediation, Access to Justice, Midstream and Downstream
JOURNAL NAME:
Beijing Law Review,
Vol.16 No.4,
December
12,
2025
ABSTRACT: The exploration of carbon-based petroleum resources seems to be a curse to the Niger Delta inhabitants of Nigeria, given the negative impacts of multinational oil companies’ operations on the Niger Delta ecological space. It is no longer new knowledge about how harmful environmental activities are to human rights and the climate systems. There is no other part of the world where multinational companies are directly linked or contribute to enormous ecological shocks than in the Niger Delta region of Nigeria, owing to poor regulatory and institutional frameworks that drive the political will in engaging the corporate power and engender corporate responsibility. By implication, the indigenous peoples of the Niger Delta are left with fewer options in seeking access to remedy and justice within municipal law and in extraterritorial contexts, resulting in the fate of notable cases like Gbemre, Okpabi, Jalla, Agbara, and Bodo Community. One observable trait across these cases is the limitation of contentious litigation as a mechanism for enforcing ecological and human rights justice, given some of the typical challenges adjudicatory mechanisms face in Nigeria. Given the reality, the Nigerian Petroleum Industry Act (PIA) was enacted in 2021 to overhaul Nigeria’s oil and gas sector, and it established two regulatory agencies saddled with the mandate to make regulations on specific issues within their governance competence. One such regulation made is the Midstream and Downstream Petroleum Alternative Dispute Resolution Regulations (the Regulations) in 2023. The Regulations aim to establish the Midstream and Downstream Petroleum Alternative Dispute Resolution Centre as a non-judicial grievance mechanism (NJGM) and provide the procedures for timely and cost-efficient dispute resolution in the sector. Therefore, the crux of this piece is to succinctly review and analyse the Regulations; and examine whether it has the potential to provide the needed forum for dispute resolution and the quest for justice and to engage the responsibility of the multinational oil companies operating in Nigeria in the light of their obligations under the UNGPs to facilitate and provide remediation where they contribute or are directly linked to human rights violations which in most cases are induced by environmental harms and climate change impacts.