The Senate has confirmed Rabiu Umar as Chief Executive of the Nigerian Midstream and Downstream Petroleum Regulatory Authority following his screening on May 5, 2026.

A statement from Umar’s media team on Thursday said lawmakers commended his professionalism, industry knowledge and strategic vision for Nigeria’s petroleum sector during the screening session. Umar also pledged to strengthen national energy security, eliminate supply bottlenecks and ensure stable fuel availability nationwide.

President Bola Tinubu had nominated Umar on April 29, 2026, as part of efforts to strengthen regulatory effectiveness and accelerate reforms under the Petroleum Industry Act.

During the screening, Umar outlined an agenda focused on supply resilience, regulatory efficiency, investor confidence and nationwide product accessibility. He also said global disruptions, including tensions around strategic shipping corridors such as the Strait of Hormuz, would continue to influence fuel prices globally.

“Global events may affect prices, but they should not define Nigeria’s stability. Our task is to build a petroleum system strong enough to absorb shocks, protect supply, and keep homes, industries and transport moving in every season,” he said.

Umar, who has over two decades of experience across downstream petroleum, logistics and manufacturing, previously held senior roles at Oando Plc, led a turnaround at Ashaka Cement Plc, and served as Group Chief Commercial Officer at Dangote Group, which he left eight months ago.

He said immediate priorities include strengthening the operational readiness of Nigeria’s 22 depots, ensuring stock buffers nationwide and working with relevant agencies to guarantee product availability.

“Energy security is not measured only by volumes in storage. It is measured by whether fuel is available when Nigerians need it, where Nigerians need it. We will build a supply architecture that is visible, reliable and national in reach,” he said.

Before his confirmation, Umar’s nomination received endorsements from industry groups. The Independent Petroleum Marketers Association of Nigeria (IPMAN) and the Petroleum Retail Outlets Owners Association of Nigeria (PETROAN) described the nomination as well received, expressing confidence in his capacity to address sector challenges.

Stakeholders within the Major Energy Marketers Association of Nigeria also welcomed the nomination, describing it as a positive signal for stability, professionalism and continued reform.

Umar pledged to reposition the authority as an efficient regulator and a catalyst for investment, growth and market confidence by removing administrative bottlenecks and improving service delivery.

“The NMDPRA under my leadership will be firm in regulation, fair in conduct and fast in execution. We will protect standards, unlock investment, remove avoidable bottlenecks and make this Authority a model of professionalism and economic value creation,” he said.

Industry observers said his presentation before the Senate reflected a practical understanding of the relationship between regulation, energy security and market stability as Nigeria’s petroleum sector continues reforms under the Petroleum Industry Act.

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