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PC-NCG Praises CVFF Launch, Pushes for Coast Guard Establishment

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By David Owei,Bayelsa

The Chief Executive and Accounting Officer of the Provisionary Committee of the proposed Nigerian Coast Guard (PC-NCG), Capt. Noah Ichaba has praised the Minister of Marine and Blue Economy, Dr. Adegboyega Oyetola, over the recent launch and unveiling of the Cabotage Vessel Financing Fund (CVFF) Application Portal to be accessed by Nigerian ship-owners

In a statement issued by the Director of Communications & Public Affairs, Dr. Piriye Kiyaramo on Monday in Abuja, Capt. Ichaba, who described the official launch and unveiling as a historic step, urged the federal government to exercise maximum political will to expedite the establishment of the Nigerian Coast Guard, which according to him, remains the longest-hope of Nigeria’s maritime business community.

“Coast Guard is the longest and singularly recognized agency by its organizational and occupational name, because, it will be primarily and wholly responsible for Nigeria’s Maritime Law Enforcement, Security and Safety Operations that have been neglected by past administrations despite its duties, functions and role, being crucial and critical to the Nigerian Maritime Business, particularly that, it will protect the flow of over 80-90% of global trade, prevent costly disruptions from piracy, terrorism, theft and safeguard billions in assets and human lives.

“The creation of Coast Guard is the next impending history that this current administration can not afford to allow it to slip off her performance scorecard. The establishment of Coast Guard is actually a primary and binding contract that the government owes her citizens and the maritime community due to its identity, purpose, and destiny.

“The need to create Coast Guard predates the Nigerian Maritime Business itself, but previous governments disappointed themselves by failing to do the needful. This obvious constraint limited and prevented fast, steady, and sustained progress for the Nigerian Maritime Domain.

“Glad that NIMASA came on-board and she is holding a pattern for Coast Guard as a Regulatory Agency, because, the Cabotage Vessel Financing Fund (CVFF) is directly linked to Coast Guard function which the Agency is performing in the absence of Coast Guard like responsibilities in maritime safety, security and statutory enforcement.

“The appreciative relationship between the CVFF and the Coast Guard function that NIMASA is saddled with is reflected in areas such as: Fund Administration and Regulatory Oversight (Coast Guard Function): Acting
regulatory and Coast Guard capacity, NIMASA administers the CVFF in accordance with the 2006 CVFF Guidelines under Section 44 of the Coastal and Inland Shipping (Cabotage) Act, 2003.

“This aims to build indigenous ship acquisition capacity and provide financial support to local operators for acquiring, constructing, and repairing vessels and including vetting applicants, approving eligible ship-owners, and ensuring that funds are used strictly for acquiring vessels intended for Cabotage trade, thereby strengthening national maritime capacity.

“NIMASA, in its Coast Guard-related enforcement role, collects the statutory 2% surcharge on contract sums performed by vessels engaged in coastal and inland shipping. This collection is enforced as part of its broader mandate to regulate and control maritime commercial activities within Nigerian waters.

“Vessels financed under the CVFF must comply with Cabotage requirements and NIMASA regulations, including Nigerian ownership, registration, manning, and technical specifications. As part of its Coast Guard role, NIMASA ensures that these vessels meet national safety, security, and seaworthiness standards before being allowed to operate.

“In its Coast Guard capacity, NIMASA conducts maritime surveillance, port state control and safety inspections to ensure that CVFF-funded vessels comply with international and national maritime safety and security conventions both before and after fund disbursement.

“Through its Cabotage Services and Maritime Safety departments, NIMASA enforces compliance with the Cabotage Act and other maritime laws, ensuring that only eligible, compliant, and properly secured vessels particularly those benefiting from the CVFF-operate within Nigerian coastal and inland waters.

“In essence, NIMASA, acting as Nigeria’s de facto Coast Guard and maritime regulatory authority, utilizes the CVFF not only as a financing mechanism but also as a policy and enforcement tool to strengthen indigenous shipping capacity, safeguard maritime security, and ensure strict compliance with national safety, security, and Cabotage regulations.

“On this commendable note, PC-NCG is inclined to crave the benevolence of relevant authorities to be deliberately committed to strategic steps for the immediate
establishment of Coast Guard, so as to solidify all efforts made and to concretely sustain envisaged outcome of repositioning of Nigeria’s maritime sector as a central pillar of national development, achieving the objective of diversifying national economy, unlocking the vast potential of Nigeria’s maritime domain, opening of opportunities for increased coastal resources and to draw huge benefits from inland waterways activities.

“Birthing the proposed Agency be considered an obligation to the Creator, the maritime environment, the lives involved, the vibrant entrepreneurial base, the global maritime commerce and the various platforms, equipment, installations, employments, tourism and Nigeria’s strategic geographic location and many more.

“The passionate appeal here is that, it is verily hoped that all levels of decision-making bodies choose to account their stewardship to the Ultimate Authority and Supreme Creator by setting aside repetitive, ridiculous and encumbering deductions, which are energy drainers, goal terminators, obstinate impediments and inducers of sickening breath,” Captain Ichaba maintained.

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Oil & Gas

Nigeria loses $226bn Revenue Since Suspension of Oil Production in Ogoniland, Says PINL •Advocates community-led, environmentally grounded approach

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By Our Correspondent

Pipeline Infrastructure Nigeria Limited (PINL), the surveillance firm in charge of the Trans-Niger Pipeline (TNP), has disclosed that Nigeria has lost an estimated $226.734 billion in revenue from the suspension of crude oil production across 96 wells in Ogoniland over the past 32 years.

PINL made the disclosure at its April monthly stakeholders’ meeting in Port Harcourt, Rivers State on Wednesday, describing the resumption of oil operations in the region as a strategic national priority, but stressed that the process must be anchored on community participation, environmental sustainability, and transparency.

Ogoniland, covered under Oil Mining Lease (OML) 11, holds the potential to produce over 500,000 barrels of crude oil per day. Operations were halted in 1993 in the area following widespread unrest and environmental concerns linked to decades of exploration activities.

Dr. Akpos Mezeh, General Manager, Community and Stakeholder Relations at PINL, said the scale of accumulated losses demands urgent attention.

“Available data shows that over $226.734 billion has been lost due to the suspension of crude oil production from 96 oil wells in Ogoniland over the past 32 years. This clearly underscores both the economic cost of inaction and the immense opportunity that lies ahead,” he said.

PINL outlined four conditions it considers essential to a successful resumption: host communities must be involved as critical stakeholders across all phases of the process; environmental clean-up and restoration efforts already underway must be sustained; a community-based security framework drawing on PINL’s pipeline surveillance model across the Niger Delta should be adopted; and economic inclusion must be prioritised, with residents benefiting directly through employment, contracts, and capacity development.

Mezeh said the company’s stance reflects wider sentiment across the region. “The position of PINL aligns with growing calls from stakeholders in the Niger Delta for the Federal Government to restart oil production in Ogoniland in a manner that balances economic benefits with environmental justice and community interests,” he said.

PINL affirmed it’s readiness to contribute directly to the effort. “At PINL, we stand ready to support this process by applying our experience in stakeholder engagement and infrastructure protection to ensure a peaceful, secure, and sustainable resumption,” Mezeh added.

According to him, observers note that any successful resumption will depend on rebuilding trust among stakeholders, resolving environmental grievances, and ensuring host communities have a central role in decision-making.

PINL maintained that, with the right approach, restarting production in Ogoniland could significantly boost Nigeria’s output, increase national revenue, and contribute to broader economic growth.

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Oil & Gas

NASS Petroleum C’tees reject petition against Pipeline surveillance contract …pass vote of confidence on Tantita, others

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National Assembly joint Committees on Petroleum Resources has dismissed three petitions against the pipeline surveillance contract, while passing a vote of confidence on Tantita Security Service, the security agents and the NNPCL for helping to restore the nation’s oil production.

Oil production, according to available records to the panel stood at about 1.8 million barrels per day as at April, an increase from the about nine hundred thousand liters per day in 2022 when the surveillance contract was awarded.

The resolution followed a motion moved by the Chairman of the House Committee on Petroleum Resources, Midstream, Henry Okojie at a one day parliamentary roundtable on the state of pipeline security and the battle against crude oil theft on Wednesday.

Okojie said that Tantita and the security agencies have recorded lots of achievements in securing the nation’s petroleum assets, thereby increasing oil revenue for the country.

Speaking at the roundtable, Speaker of the House of the apex legislature,Rt Hon Abbas Tajudeen said despite the ongoing tensions in the Middle East and the protracted conflict involving Russia and Ukraine, the need for valiant efforts at finding alternative energy sources has become necessary, adding that crude oil still remains the largest source of primary energy in the world, especially the transport sector where it still powers 95 percent of all vehicles, planes and ships.

The Speaker said the current crises, particularly with the closure of the Strait of Hormuz, has resulted in price surges and supply shortages, with consequential impact on the nation’s economic survival, saying “as a nation, we must rise to the challenge, and this roundtable is a clear indication that the National Assembly is ready to lead the way.

He said further that in order to understand why the surveillance contract became necessary, “we must remember that Nigeria’s journey as an oil-producing nation has been a very challenging one.

“The discovery of petroleum has both earned us massive foreign exchange and resulted in environmental degradation and despair. As a result, the Niger Delta has witnessed profound agitations over the years which often resulted in pipeline vandalism, crude oil theft, and illegal refining activities.

“Desperate communities and weak enforcement structures created a climate of instability in the oil sector with staggering consequences.

“At some point, Nigeria was losing billions of dollars annually as between 10 to 30 percent of crude oil production was lost to theft, undermining national revenue and questioning our capacity to remain a reliable oil producer.

“It was within this context that the Federal Government introduced the pipeline surveillance contract, including the engagement of private security actors and community-based structures.

“These interventions were designed to provide security to our oil facilities, with the understanding that without the help of the communities where these pipelines and other infrastructure were located, the job of securing them would be impossible.

“In the end, the synergy of private surveillance providers, our security agencies, and community engagement, led to remarkable improvements in our daily production quotas.”

The number four citizen of Nigeria said further that there has been clear undeniable and compelling success stories, saying “recent reports indicate that most of the illegal tapping points have been dismantled, production levels have improved significantly and oil receipts are approaching near-total delivery to export terminals, compared to the alarming losses of previous years when production sometimes plummeted to about 700 barrels per day.

“Today, largely due to these surveillance/security efforts, we have been able to ramp up production to about 1.8 million barrel per day. Importantly, the surveillance contract has been able to create direct employment for thousands of Niger Delta youths who were formerly agitators, providing a legitimate
alternative to crime, and placing security back in the hands of the people who host the facilities.

“There is no doubt that we can do better. There are still a number of challenges, particularly as they concern accountability, transparency, and the effectiveness of certain surveillance frameworks.

“Recent public discourse suggests that crude oil theft still occurs at concerning levels, sometimes even under existing security arrangements. This underscores the need for continuous oversight and reform”.

He said the National Assembly has remained at the forefront of confronting the challenges in the oil sector and has through legislation, oversight, and appropriation taken deliberate steps to strengthen Nigeria’s response to threats to our oil industry.

He said “we have enacted and reviewed laws such as the Petroleum Production and Distribution (Anti-Sabotage) Act and other relevant statutes aimed at deterring-pipeline vandalism while emplacing stringent penalties.

“We have also worked to strengthen institutions like the National Oil Spill Detection and Response Agency (NOSDRA), recognizing the need for improved monitoring and environmental accountability.

“Both are the fruits of comprehensive and deliberate policy actions that were enabled by the passing of the landmark Petroleum Industry Act (PIA). Some of the provisions of this act, like the Host Community Development Trust, made Corporate Social Responsibility a legal mandate and gave host communities a direct financial stake in the profitability of the oil sector.

“Moreover, by legislating that communities forfeit their entitlement for the year if vandalism occurs in their domain, the law operationalized the concept of “shared responsibility.” Communities now police their own areas, knowing that an attack on a pipeline becomes an attack on their trust fund.

“The 10th National Assembly has continued to take bold legislative steps to institutionalize the gains of the PIA. From maintaining a rigorous oversight of the Act to ensure steady implementation, to our recent investigative hearings on oil theft, we are closing the legal loopholes that once allowed criminals to thrive.

‘Furthermore, this Assembly has exercised its constitutional mandate by probing aspects of the surveillance contract, approving critical funding for pipeline security, and insisting that crude oil theft be treated not just as an economic crime, but as a national security threat requiring coordinated action across agencies.

“In summary, we have consistently emphasized that curbing crude oil theft must be a collective responsibility, involving government, host communities, security agencies, and private operators alike.”

The Speaker said the event was an opportunity to advance the fortunes of the oil industry by consolidating on the gains made so far from the surveillance contract, while addressing existing gaps, while also
reassessing the current pipeline surveillance architecture, strengthen transparency and accountability mechanisms, deepen community engagement as critical stakeholders in protecting national assets, and align legislative frameworks with emerging realities in the oil and gas sector, particularly under the circumstances the world has now found itself.

He said “let us remember that the story of Nigeria’s oil industry is not only one of challenges, but also of resilience and possibility. Let us build a system where pipelines are no longer targets, but symbols of shared prosperity; where host communities are not marginalized, but empowered partners; and where Nigeria’s oil wealth translates into sustainable national development.

“The Middle East is in turmoil, Russia is distracted, and global energy maps are being redrawn. The world is looking for energy security, and Nigeria must put itself out there as a credible alternative. We cannot afford the luxury of internal sabotage. Our message to the world is clear: Nigeria is securing its assets, stabilizing its output, and is open for business.”

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Oil & Gas

SECURING NIGERIA’S OIL LIFELINE: Third phase Amnesty Leaders Endorse Continuation of Tantita,s surveillance contact, Oppose Decentralisation

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By David Owei,Bayelsa

Leaders of the Third Phase of the Presidential Amnesty Programme have strongly endorsed the retention of the pipeline surveillance contract awarded to Tantita Security Services Nigeria Limited (TSSNL), owned by High Chief Government Oweizide Ekpemupolo, popularly known as Tompolo. They have urged President Bola Ahmed Tinubu to resist calls for the contract’s termination or fragmentation, describing such moves as detrimental to the hard-won peace and security in the Niger Delta region.

In a statement issued by National Chairman Gen. Elaye Slaboh (T.D. Dollars) and the national executive, the group warned that any disruption to Tantita’s mandate would jeopardise recent gains in combating crude oil theft, illegal bunkering, and pipeline vandalism. They emphasised that no other individual or entity possesses the local influence, community trust, and operational expertise required to effectively safeguard Nigeria’s critical oil infrastructure.

“Those agitating for the cancellation or decentralisation of the contract are enemies of the fragile peace we have achieved in the Niger Delta,” the leaders declared. They cautioned that reversing the current arrangement could trigger a resurgence of economic sabotage, leading to a sharp decline in crude oil production and significant revenue losses for the national economy.

The amnesty leaders alleged that the campaign against Tantita is largely orchestrated by oil thieves, pipeline vandals, and other vested interests intent on undermining progress in the fight against oil theft. They further claimed that political opponents of the Tinubu administration are exploiting the issue to sabotage the Renewed Hope Agenda, particularly in the lead-up to the 2027 general elections, while seeking to distract from Tompolo’s grassroots mobilisation efforts in support of the President’s re-election bid.

Gen. Slabor highlighted Tantita’s innovative operational model, which combines robust pipeline protection with extensive community engagement and sustainable development initiatives. This holistic approach, he noted, is unprecedented in the Niger Delta and has been instrumental in fostering long-term regional stability and economic recovery.

Rather than fragmenting the surveillance framework, the group advised the Federal Government to focus on reviewing and revoking oil wells operated by non-indigenes of the Niger Delta, with a view to reallocating them to genuine local stakeholders. Such a policy, they argued, would promote authentic indigenous participation, strengthen community ownership, and contribute to more sustainable national oil security.

This position from Third Phase Amnesty Programme leaders underscores the strategic importance of a unified, effective surveillance mechanism in protecting Nigeria’s economic lifeline while advancing inclusive development in the oil-producing region. The Federal Government is expected to weigh these perspectives carefully as it reviews arrangements for safeguarding petroleum assets.

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