In a sector long dominated by international giants, Simbi Wabote made it his mission to shift the balance. As Executive Secretary of the Nigerian Content Development and Monitoring Board (NCDMB) from 2016 to 2023, Wabote oversaw a period of unprecedented local growth in Nigeria’s oil and gas industry—championing reforms, policies, and investments that elevated domestic firms from the margins to the center of the conversation.
Simbi Wabote understood the stakes from the start. Nigeria, despite being a major oil producer, had historically relied heavily on foreign contractors, sidelining local suppliers and limiting the economic multiplier effect of its energy sector. When he took office, local content levels hovered around 26%. Seven years later, they had doubled, reaching 54% under his watch. But the deeper story was about what—and who—made up that number.
His approach to strengthening domestic players was never rooted in rhetoric. It was grounded in infrastructure, finance, skills development, and enforceable policy. Wabote recognized early that capacity does not emerge from sentiment. It must be built, funded, and protected within a clear strategic framework.
One of his cornerstone initiatives was expanding access to capital. Through the Nigerian Content Intervention Fund (NCIF), Wabote created a mechanism for local companies to access single-digit interest loans—breaking down one of the biggest barriers to participation. In a landscape where borrowing costs often placed indigenous firms at a structural disadvantage, the NCIF provided breathing room to invest, expand, and compete.
He didn’t stop at financing. Wabote also prioritized industrial infrastructure, championing the creation of Nigerian Oil and Gas Parks (NOGaPS) across key oil-producing regions. These parks weren’t just symbolic—they offered plug-and-play facilities for local manufacturers, lowering startup costs and co-locating supply chains. The goal was simple: make it easier for Nigerian firms to deliver services and manufacture components that had previously been imported.
He understood the talent equation, too. Under his leadership, the NCDMB scaled up training programs across welding, fabrication, subsea engineering, and project management. Thousands of Nigerians gained technical skills aligned with industry demand. But Wabote didn’t treat training as a numbers game. He pushed for curriculum alignment, instructor quality, and job placement tracking—ensuring that upskilling translated into employment and enterprise.
Policy enforcement was another tool in his arsenal. While he collaborated closely with operators and international oil companies, he maintained a firm stance on compliance. Wabote led efforts to digitize monitoring systems, increase audit capacity, and close loopholes that had previously allowed token gestures to pass as “local content.” Under his leadership, exemptions were harder to obtain and performance was more transparently tracked. His interview with Principal Post goes into this further.
Still, his approach was not combative. Wabote favored alignment over antagonism. He encouraged joint ventures between foreign and local firms, advocated for long-term supplier development plans, and created forums for knowledge exchange. In his view, strengthening domestic players didn’t require shutting the door on global expertise. It required redesigning the terms of engagement.
Wabote also paid close attention to how success was measured. Rather than focus solely on the number of contracts awarded to Nigerian companies, he tracked value retention—how much of each dollar spent in the sector stayed within the country through labor, materials, services, and reinvestment. That metric, he believed, was the real litmus test of progress.
His efforts yielded tangible results. More Nigerian companies now operate at higher tiers of the oil and gas value chain, providing engineering, procurement, and technical services at globally competitive standards. Indigenous marine service providers, fabricators, and OEM partners have gained footholds once thought unreachable.
But Simbi Wabote’s impact goes beyond the energy sector. By demonstrating that local participation can be systematically increased without compromising efficiency or quality, he set a precedent for other industries. He showed that policy, when backed by institutional will and operational strategy, can transform entire ecosystems.
What drove him was not just economic logic—it was conviction. Wabote believed that Nigeria’s energy wealth should benefit more than balance sheets. It should build companies, train citizens, and create durable opportunity. That belief, consistently applied, became the foundation of his work.
Simbi Wabote didn’t simply advocate for local content. He made it function. And in doing so, he redefined what strength looks like in the oil and gas sector—not dominance, but participation. Not protectionism, but performance. And not short-term contracts, but long-term capacity.
Learn more about Simbi Wabote on his LinkedIn page.