Maritime Security and Safety
NASS Endorses Tantita Security Contract, Dismisses Petitions Over Pipeline Surveillance
NASS Endorses Tantita Security Contract, Dismisses Petitions Over Pipeline Surveillance
By Okeoghene Onoriobe
Nigeria’s National Assembly has thrown its weight behind the continued engagement of Tantita Security Services Nigeria Limited for pipeline surveillance operations, with lawmakers at a joint Senate and House of Representatives roundtable passing a unanimous vote of confidence in the company.
The joint session, convened by the Senate and House of Representatives Committees on Petroleum Resources, equally dismissed all petitions filed against Tantita’s pipeline surveillance contract following a motion moved by the Chairman of the House Committee on Petroleum Resources (Midstream), Hon. Henry Okojie.
Okojie argued that Tantita, in collaboration with relevant security agencies, had recorded considerable achievements in safeguarding the nation’s petroleum assets, translating into improved oil revenues for the country.
The endorsement followed extensive deliberations at the one-day parliamentary roundtable on the state of pipeline security and Nigeria’s battle against crude oil theft, where legislators reviewed submissions from wide-ranging stakeholders across the oil and gas sector. Data presented at the session pointed to increased crude oil output and a marked reduction in pipeline vandalism since Tantita’s engagement commenced.
Declaring the event open, Speaker of the House of Representatives, Rep. Abbas Tajudeen, noted that despite simmering tensions in the Middle East and the lingering Russia-Ukraine conflict, crude oil remains the world’s largest source of primary energy — particularly in the transport sector, where it still powers 95 per cent of all vehicles, planes and ships.
The Speaker disclosed that the security gains from enhanced pipeline surveillance have helped push Nigeria’s crude oil production to approximately 1.8 million barrels per day, a significant recovery from previous lows triggered by rampant oil theft. He recalled that at the height of the crisis, production collapsed sharply, costing the country billions of dollars in lost revenue and damaging Nigeria’s reputation as a dependable oil producer.
“Nigeria previously lost between 10 and 30 per cent of its crude oil output to theft annually,” Tajudeen said, adding that illegal tapping points had since been largely dismantled while crude deliveries to export terminals had improved markedly.
Beyond production gains, the Speaker highlighted the contract’s social dividend, noting that the surveillance arrangement had generated employment for thousands of Niger Delta youths, many of whom were formerly involved in agitation, offering them alternative livelihoods while strengthening community participation in the protection of oil infrastructure.
He cited legislative backing for the arrangement, including the Petroleum Production and Distribution (Anti-Sabotage) Act and reforms under the Petroleum Industry Act (PIA), as having reinforced enforcement against vandalism and deepened sector governance. He also pointed to the role of the National Oil Spill Detection and Response Agency (NOSDRA) and the Host Community Development Trust under the PIA, which mandates corporate responsibility and gives host communities a financial stake in protecting oil assets.
The Chairman of the House Committee on Petroleum Resources (Downstream), Ikenga Ugochinyere, said the panel subjected every petition and complaint to thorough scrutiny but found no credible basis to sustain any of the claims.
“There is no credible evidence to sustain any of the allegations. Accordingly, all complaints against Tantita are hereby dismissed,” Ugochinyere declared.
His Senate counterpart, Chairman of the Senate Committee on Petroleum Resources (Downstream), Agom Jarigbe, urged policy consistency, warning that disrupting a framework already delivering results would be counterproductive.
“Disrupting a system that is already delivering results would be counterproductive. Our responsibility is to ensure stability,” Jarigbe said.
Odianosen Okojie also cautioned against moves to fragment the surveillance contract, warning that such a step could weaken operational coordination and erode accountability. “We must strengthen what works, not dilute it. Nigeria’s economic security depends on disciplined execution,” he said.
Senior government officials at the session, including Minister of State for Defence, Bello Matawalle, and the Group Chief Executive Officer of the Nigerian National Petroleum Company Limited (NNPCL), Bayo Ojulari, also acknowledged the improvements recorded under the current arrangement.
Ojulari told the meeting that national crude oil production had grown from a historic low of 960,000 barrels per day in 2022 to an average of 1.71 million barrels per day, reaching a peak of 1.84 million barrels per day in 2025 — a turnaround he attributed to an integrated energy security model deployed across the Niger Delta pipeline network.
He described the success as far from accidental, crediting an approach that combined “legislative and executive policy alignment, actionable intelligence, kinetic deployment capabilities, regulatory oversight, industry cooperation, and community-embedded surveillance mechanisms.”
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