Things Fall Apart: Niger Delta Oil Moguls Clash in a Battle of Power, Pride, Influence 

Something important is unfolding in the Niger Delta, and it sits at the centre of Nigeria’s oil economy. It is a struggle over who controls pipeline surveillance contracts, and by extension, who controls access to oil infrastructure.

At the centre is Government Ekpemupolo, known as Tompolo. His company, Tantita Security Services, currently holds a N48 billion annual contract from the Nigerian National Petroleum Company to protect pipelines. That role places him in charge of securing assets that determine how much oil Nigeria can actually produce and sell.

This position did not emerge suddenly. Tompolo moved from militant leadership during the Niger Delta insurgency to a government-backed contractor after the 2009 amnesty. Today, he operates within local networks that many argue are effective at reducing oil theft, which previously cut national output by hundreds of thousands of barrels per day.

The contract is now under pressure as rival figures and groups push to split or reassign it. Their argument is simple: one operator should not control such a large security footprint. Behind that argument is a struggle for influence, access, and revenue.

Moreover, the stakes are high. Nigeria’s oil output has recently recovered to about 2.2 million barrels per day. Any disruption to pipeline security could reverse that progress. There are already warnings that if the balance shifts badly, tensions in the region could rise again.

At the same time, other issues are running alongside this conflict. The federal government is resolving long-standing disputes over oil blocks and state boundaries. Host communities continue to protest exclusion from infrastructure spending, while also dealing with environmental damage from spills and illegal refining.

  So, can Nigeria maintain oil stability while competing interests fight over control of the system that keeps production running? Only time will tell.

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