Mineral Extraction and Governance in the Nigerian Mining Industry: An Examination of Regulatory Conflicts Amongst Nigeria’s Three Tiers of Government
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Abstract
Nigeria’s abundant mineral potentials can be harnessed to
significantly contribute to her socio-economic development if
the regulatory framework of the Nigerian Mining Industry
(NMI) is properly articulated and implemented, devoid of the
regulatory conflicts that have been observed amongst various
regulatory and government entities. This article analyses a 2019 –
2020 study undertaken by the Ministry of Mines and Steel
Development in the Federal Capital Territory and 17 out of the
36 States of the Federal Republic of Nigeria which exposed
mining sector-related regulatory conflicts amongst the Federal,
State and Local Governments and their Ministries, Departments,
and Agencies (MDAs). The study also revealed that, despite
certain extant Constitutional and statutory instruments vesting the control of minerals and mining activities on the Federal
Government and its Ministry of Mines and Steel Development,
the implementation of other national and subnational statutory
instruments has generated regulatory conflicts and controversial
interferences in the governance of mineral resources in the
country. This development has led to adverse political and socioeconomic implications and outcomes. Thus, after an in-depth
consideration of these regulatory conflicts and its implications,
the article recommends, among other salient solutions, the
amendment and/or repeal of all applicable mining statutes and
regulations to remove these regulatory conflicts, and this will
better position the NMI on the path to restoration and
ultimately surpassing its glorious past.
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