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Sponsors, lenders and EPC contractors operating in Nigeria’s oil, gas and infrastructure sectors face a consequential choice whenever a high-value dispute crystallises: submit it to arbitration or fight it in Nigerian courts. The question of arbitration vs litigation in Nigeria’s oil and gas sector has been sharpened by the Arbitration and Mediation Act 2023 (AMA 2023), the operationalisation of the Nigerian Upstream Petroleum Regulatory Commission’s ADR Centre (NUPRC ADRC), and Nigeria’s renewed National Arbitration Policy, all of which have shifted the enforceability, cost and interim-relief calculus in 2026. This article delivers a structured, dimension-by-dimension comparison and a direct decision framework so that project participants can choose the right forum before engaging counsel.
Arbitration in the oil and gas context means submitting a commercial dispute to a private tribunal, one or three arbitrators chosen by the parties, whose award is final and binding, subject only to limited grounds for setting aside. Nigeria’s Arbitration and Mediation Act 2023 now serves as the federal lex arbitri, replacing the 1988 Act and aligning Nigerian arbitration law more closely with the UNCITRAL Model Law. Nigeria is also a signatory to the New York Convention on the Recognition and Enforcement of Foreign Arbitral Awards, which means awards rendered in another contracting state are enforceable in Nigerian courts.
Arbitration is the dominant dispute resolution mechanism in upstream petroleum agreements, production sharing contracts, gas sale and purchase agreements and large-scale EPC/turnkey contracts. Institutional options available to parties in Nigeria include the Lagos Court of Arbitration (LCA), the Regional Centre for International Commercial Arbitration Lagos (RCICAL), the International Centre for Arbitration and Mediation Abuja (ICAMA), and international institutions such as the ICC International Court of Arbitration. Parties may also choose ad hoc arbitration under UNCITRAL Rules.
The advantages of arbitration in Nigeria for oil and gas disputes include:
A well-drafted arbitration clause specifies the seat, the governing substantive law, the number of arbitrators, the appointing authority, the institutional rules, and whether emergency-arbitrator provisions apply. Red flags that frequently arise in Nigerian oil and gas contracts include pathological clauses that name a non-existent institution, clauses that attempt to subject arbitral awards to full appellate review (undermining finality), and omitting the seat, which can trigger costly jurisdictional challenges. Lenders should ensure the clause covers disputes arising under related financing and security documents, not only the concession agreement itself.
Litigation means resolving a dispute through Nigeria’s court system. The Federal High Court (FHC) has exclusive jurisdiction over matters connected with mines and minerals (including oil and gas), admiralty, federal revenue, and disputes involving the federal government or its agencies. State High Courts handle general commercial disputes where the FHC does not have exclusive jurisdiction. The National Industrial Court (NICN) adjudicates employment and labour matters, which may arise in large-scale infrastructure projects involving workforce disputes.
Litigation remains the appropriate, and sometimes the only, forum in several important scenarios relevant to dispute resolution for infrastructure projects and petroleum operations:
Certain categories of disputes are simply not arbitrable under Nigerian law. These include disputes over the status of a company or partnership (winding-up petitions), criminal conduct, tax assessments, bankruptcy proceedings, and matters affecting the rights of third parties who are not signatories to the arbitration agreement. Under the Petroleum Industry Act 2021 (PIA 2021), regulatory decisions by the NUPRC or the Nigerian Midstream and Downstream Petroleum Regulatory Authority (NMDPRA) are subject to administrative appeal processes and, ultimately, judicial review, not arbitration. Sponsors and contractors must identify these non-arbitrable elements early in dispute planning.
| Dimension | Arbitration | Litigation |
|---|---|---|
| Eligibility / arbitrability | Commercial disputes generally arbitrable; public-law, criminal and regulatory matters excluded. | Broad jurisdiction; FHC exclusive for oil & gas and federal-revenue matters. |
| Forum neutrality / seat | Parties choose seat (Lagos, London, Paris); neutral for foreign sponsors. | Forum fixed by plaintiff’s filing; domestic court applies Nigerian law. |
| Enforceability | Awards final; enforceable under AMA 2023 and New York Convention in 170+ states. | Judgments enforceable domestically; multi-tier appeals slow execution. |
| Interim relief | Emergency arbitrator available; courts may also grant interim measures in aid of arbitration. | Courts have broad, immediate power, freezing orders, receivership, injunctions. |
| Timing | Typically faster for complex technical disputes if procedures are front-loaded. | Often multi-year; pre-trial, discovery and appellate stages add duration. |
| Cost | Higher upfront (tribunal and admin fees) but often lower total cost for complex disputes. | Lower filing fees but cumulative counsel costs rise with duration. |
| Confidentiality | Private by default, protects commercial sensitivity. | Public hearings and published judgments; limited confidentiality. |
| Technical expertise | Parties select arbitrators with subject-matter expertise. | Judges may lack specialist technical knowledge; expert witnesses used. |
| Regulatory interface (PIA / NUPRC) | NUPRC ADRC available as first-line ADR for upstream disputes. | Courts required for judicial review of regulator decisions. |
| Risk for lenders / sponsors | Better cross-border enforcement; ensure award convertible to judgment locally. | Better for quick court orders against local assets; appeals protect third parties. |
Three headline takeaways from this comparison of arbitration vs litigation in Nigeria’s oil and gas sector:
The sections below examine each decision dimension in detail, drawing on the Arbitration and Mediation Act 2023, the Petroleum Industry Act 2021, NUPRC ADRC practice and current case-law trends.
The enforceability of arbitration awards in Nigeria has been materially strengthened by AMA 2023. A party seeking to enforce an arbitral award files the award, the arbitration agreement and a certified copy of the award at the Federal High Court. Recognition may only be refused on narrow grounds: incapacity, invalid agreement, lack of proper notice, excess of tribunal jurisdiction, irregularity in tribunal composition, or conflict with Nigerian public policy. Crucially, AMA 2023 reduced the scope for public-policy challenges compared to the old regime, and Supreme Court decisions in the 2020–2026 period have reinforced the separability doctrine and the principle that courts should not review the merits of an award.
For upstream petroleum disputes, NUPRC ADRC mediation outcomes that result in a settlement agreement can be recorded as consent awards and enforced similarly. In contrast, court judgments are enforceable domestically through standard execution mechanisms (garnishee, writ of fieri facias, receivership) but lack the cross-border portability of an arbitral award, a critical disadvantage for sponsors with assets or parent entities outside Nigeria.
Interim relief is often the most time-sensitive element of an oil and gas dispute, a cargo may be about to leave port, a joint-venture partner may be dissipating assets, or a regulator may be poised to revoke a licence. AMA 2023 expressly recognises emergency arbitrator provisions and permits Nigerian courts to grant interim measures in support of arbitration proceedings (whether seated in Nigeria or abroad). However, the practical availability of emergency arbitrators in Nigerian institutional arbitration is still maturing. Industry observers expect that, in 2026, the fastest route to a freezing order or asset-preservation injunction in Nigeria remains a motion on notice (or ex parte, in urgent cases) before the Federal High Court.
Sponsors and lenders should build a hybrid strategy: include emergency-arbitrator clauses in contracts for international proceedings, while retaining the contractual right to seek interim relief from Nigerian courts without waiving the arbitration agreement.
A cost comparison of arbitration and litigation in Nigeria must account for both direct fees and the time-value impact of prolonged proceedings. The table below outlines the principal cost categories:
| Cost item | Arbitration | Litigation |
|---|---|---|
| Institution / admin fees | Scaled by amount in dispute; institutional schedules (LCA, RCICAL, ICC) range from modest sums for smaller claims to substantial fees for disputes exceeding USD 50 million. | Federal High Court filing fees are fixed on a Naira schedule and are comparatively low regardless of claim value. |
| Tribunal / arbitrator fees | Parties share arbitrator fees (hourly, daily or ad valorem); a three-member tribunal in a major oil & gas dispute represents a significant expense. | No separate judge fees; the cost is borne by the state. |
| Counsel and experts | Concentrated over a shorter period; total counsel spend often lower because arbitration is faster to final award. | Counsel engaged over multiple years; cumulative fees frequently match or exceed arbitration counsel costs. |
| Stamp duty / tax | Stamp duty may apply to the arbitration agreement and award under the Stamp Duties Act; parties should confirm current rates. | Court judgments may attract registration and enforcement-related stamp duties. |
| Enforcement / execution | Filing award for recognition at FHC incurs additional court fees plus sheriff and process-server costs. | Execution via garnishee, sheriff seizure or receivership, standard court fee schedules apply. |
The net effect: for complex, high-value oil and gas disputes, arbitration often costs more upfront but delivers a final, enforceable outcome faster. Litigation’s lower filing fees are deceptive, the true cost is measured in years of counsel billing and opportunity cost of delayed recovery.
Both arbitration tribunals and Nigerian courts can award compensatory damages, interest and costs. Arbitrators may also grant declaratory relief and, in appropriate cases, specific performance, though the practical enforceability of specific-performance orders depends on the cooperation of the losing party or subsequent court enforcement. Limitation periods under Nigerian law (typically six years for simple contracts under the Limitation Act applicable in Lagos and equivalent state statutes) run identically regardless of forum, but the commencement of arbitration proceedings tolls the limitation clock from the date of the notice of arbitration or appointment request. Parties must check whether the arbitration clause shortens the limitation period, common in certain EPC standard forms, and ensure the notice of dispute is issued within time.
Arbitration gives parties procedural control that is unavailable in litigation. Parties may agree on expedited timelines, bifurcate liability and quantum, limit document production (avoiding the broad discovery norms of Nigerian court practice), and schedule hearings to suit arbitrator and counsel availability. The AMA 2023 encourages tribunals to adopt case-management techniques and to render awards efficiently. By contrast, Federal High Court proceedings are subject to the court’s docket, adjournments, interlocutory applications and the appellate structure, from FHC to the Court of Appeal and, by leave, to the Supreme Court. A complex oil and gas case can take five to eight years to reach a final, unappealable judgment.
Arbitral awards under AMA 2023 may be challenged only on limited grounds via a setting-aside application, and there is no appeal on the merits, a decisive advantage for parties seeking finality.
The Petroleum Industry Act 2021 created a new regulatory architecture. The NUPRC regulates upstream operations and has established an ADR Centre (ADRC) to handle disputes between licensees, between licensees and host communities, and between operators and service providers in the upstream sector. The NUPRC ADRC offers mediation and conciliation as a first-line resolution process; outcomes that settle may be recorded as binding agreements. However, disputes involving the exercise of regulatory powers, licence grant, revocation, environmental compliance, penalty imposition, must be resolved through the administrative appeal process established under PIA 2021 and, ultimately, by judicial review before the Federal High Court.
Sponsors and contractors should map each potential dispute type at the contract-drafting stage to determine whether it falls within the NUPRC ADRC’s remit, requires arbitration, or will inevitably involve the courts.
Three developments in the 2024–2026 period have shifted the arbitration vs court comparison in Nigeria:
Together, these changes tilt the balance further toward arbitration for most commercial oil, gas and infrastructure disputes, while reinforcing the necessity of courts for regulatory, public-law and urgent-interim-relief matters.
The table below maps common priority scenarios to the recommended forum. Use it as a starting point; every dispute has unique facts that may alter the analysis.
| If your priority is… | Choose… |
|---|---|
| Confidentiality and technical tribunal expertise | Arbitration, seat and tribunal with nominated sector experts |
| Fast emergency asset preservation (freezing / seizure) | Litigation, seek court freezing injunction or receivership |
| Cross-border enforceability against foreign assets | Arbitration, award enforceable under the New York Convention |
| Regulatory or public-law relief (licence revocation, sanctions) | Litigation, court plus administrative appeal under PIA 2021 |
| Preserving commercial relationships / settlement | Arbitration or mediation, consensual ADR; NUPRC ADRC for upstream |
| Lender security enforcement against local assets | Litigation, local judgments, receivership; or arbitrate with a clause ensuring award-to-judgment conversion |
Choose arbitration when:
Choose litigation when:
Forum selection is not a decision to defer. Engage specialist dispute-resolution counsel at the following trigger points:
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Theo Osanakpo at Dr. T.C Osanakpo & CO, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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