KEY POINTS
- Keyamo suspends the helicopter landing fee on oil operators for two months.
- Oil firms warned the fee threatened critical offshore operations.
- An inter-ministerial committee will develop a permanent framework.
Faced with warnings from oil companies that a $300 helicopter landing fee could disrupt offshore operations, Aviation Minister Festus Keyamo suspended the charge Monday, buying the industry two months of breathing room while a solution is worked out.
The helicopter landing fee Nigeria controversy has simmered between aviation regulators and the petroleum sector for some time. The levy, prescribed by the Nigerian Airspace Management Agency, applies to helicopter operations at oil fields, terminals, platforms, rigs, Floating Production Storage and Offloading facilities, heliports and airstrips used in oil and gas operations.
Committee to Find a Lasting Fix
Keyamo issued the suspension directive during a meeting at the aviation ministry in Abuja, attended by Minister of State for Petroleum Resources Heineken Lokpobiri, the CEO of the Nigerian Upstream Petroleum Regulatory Commission Oritsemeyiwa Eyesan, and representatives of the Oil Producers Trade Section and the Independent Petroleum Producers Group.
Furthermore, oil industry delegates argued at the meeting that keeping the fee in place risked choking crew transfers, logistics support and emergency response operations across Nigeria’s offshore oil infrastructure.
Keyamo’s suspension order came with a condition. He immediately announced the formation of an inter-ministerial committee, drawing members from both aviation and petroleum sectors, to examine the concerns raised and produce a regulatory framework that works for all parties.
The committee has two months to deliver something workable. Until then, enforcement of the helicopter landing fee Nigeria operators have been fighting is off the table.
Both Sectors Have a Stake in Getting This Right
Both ministers closed the meeting with a joint statement of intent, reaffirming that regulatory policy must support operational efficiency in sectors that together anchor significant portions of Nigeria’s economy.
Helicopter services are not a luxury in Nigeria’s offshore oil industry. They are the primary means of moving workers and supplies between the mainland and facilities sitting miles out at sea. A fee structure that further makes those operations more expensive or less predictable carries real consequences for production.
The inter-ministerial committee’s recommendations, when they come, will need to satisfy regulators looking to collect statutory revenue and operators who cannot afford disruption to the supply chains keeping Nigeria’s oil flowing.


