Changeflow GovPing Insurance OPSN Engages NAICOM on NIIRA 2025 Implementatio...
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OPSN Engages NAICOM on NIIRA 2025 Implementation and Sectoral Insurance Products for Maritime and Petroleum

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Summary

The Organized Private Sector of Nigeria (OPSN) met with NAICOM to discuss implementation of the Nigerian Insurance Industry Reform Act (NIIRA) 2025 and deployment of sector-specific insurance products for the maritime and petroleum sectors. OPSN presented two priority tracks: maritime products for container and cargo-related losses, and petroleum products for retail distribution public liability and transit risks. NAICOM confirmed it retains authority to issue frameworks, guidelines, and premium determinations for compulsory insurance products under NIIRA 2025. Both parties agreed to establish a technical working group to develop implementation modalities.

Published by NAICOM on naicom.gov.ng . Detected, standardized, and enriched by GovPing. Review our methodology and editorial standards .

What changed

NAICOM and OPSN held a stakeholder engagement meeting on coordinated implementation of NIIRA 2025, which establishes a framework for compulsory insurance products. The meeting addressed two priority tracks: maritime sector products targeting container and cargo compensation gaps, and petroleum sector products covering retail distribution liability and transit risks.

Affected industry participants—including freight forwarders, transport associations, retailers, manufacturers, and underwriters—should monitor for upcoming technical working group proceedings and any subsequent NAICOM-issued frameworks and premium guidelines. Stakeholders in the maritime and petroleum distribution sectors should prepare to engage with proposed implementation modalities as they develop.

Archived snapshot

Apr 20, 2026

GovPing captured this document from the original source. If the source has since changed or been removed, this is the text as it existed at that time.

Representatives of the Organized Private Sector (OPSN) paid a visit to the National Insurance Commission (NAICOM), accompanied by delegates from relevant federal ministries to discuss coordinated implementation of provisions of the Nigerian Insurance Industry Reform Act (NIIRA) 2025 and the deployment of sector specific insurance products for the maritime and petroleum sectors. Dr. Alban Igwe, leader of the delegation and Chairman of the OPS Insurance-Tech Committee, stated that the engagement follows months of stakeholder consultations across the maritime and petroleum sectors, including freight forwarders, transport associations, retailers, and underwriters. He said they are at NAICOM for regulatory discussions on implementation provisions of the Law and operationalization of insurance products to address longstanding gaps in compensation and risk transfer in these sectors. Dr. Igwe said the initiative is a multi stakeholder, private sector led effort mandated by two federal ministries (Ministries of Petroleum and Blue Economy) to coordinate stakeholders and propose implementation of insurance provision under the NIIRA 2025. OPSN identified umbrella organizations participating in the effort, including the Nigerian Chamber of Commerce, Manufacturers Association of Nigeria, National Association of Small Scale Industries and trade associations in the transport and petroleum distribution sectors. OPSN described two priority tracks: 1. Maritime sector product(s) to mitigate container and cargo-related losses and to provide faster compensation for affected parties. 2. Petroleum sector product(s) to provide public liability/commission liability cover for retail distribution and transit risks (noting tight retail margins and the need to consider pricing templates). The Commissioner for Insurance welcomed the initiative, stating that NAICOM is committed to collaborating with stakeholders to implement NIIRA 2025. He emphasized that the Commission is responsible for issuing frameworks, guidelines, and premium determinations for compulsory insurance products under NIIRA 2025, and that technical proposals must align with the regulator’s remit. The Commissioner stressed that consumer protection is paramount, and proposals must be justified and assessed for fairness. The meeting concluded that a technical working group should be established to review the proposal and develop implementation modalities.


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Last updated

Classification

Agency
NAICOM
Instrument
Notice
Branch
Executive
Legal weight
Non-binding
Stage
Final
Change scope
Minor

Who this affects

Applies to
Insurers Importers and exporters Energy companies
Industry sector
5241 Insurance
Activity scope
Stakeholder consultation Regulatory coordination Insurance product development
Geographic scope
NG NG

Taxonomy

Primary area
Insurance
Operational domain
Compliance
Topics
Maritime Energy

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