KEY POINTS
- London court stays Emeka Offor loan dispute.
- Kaztec gains room to negotiate restructuring.
- $111 million claim remains unresolved for now.
Emeka Offor, a Nigerian oil businessman, has won a big victory in the long-running $111 million Emeka Offor debt case.
A Nigerian bank has settled its claim against Kaztec Engineering Ltd., his engineering company, leading a London court to formally stay the case. The loan was originally taken to finance an oil asset acquisition that later unraveled, sparking years of arguments over repayment failures.
According to court records, Unity Bank PLC has reached an agreement with Kaztec, a company that is part of Offor’s Chrome Group. The stay is now in force, which means that the lawsuit is on hold while the parties talk about how to restructure their debts and come to an agreement on the terms of the settlement. The move eases immediate legal pressure on both Offor and the company he guaranteed.
Stay gives Kaztec space as Emeka Offor loan dispute cools
The case had drawn widespread interest. It pitted a major African lender against Kaztec, once celebrated for building offshore platforms and pipelines across the Niger Delta. Offor, 66, is the founder of the Chrome Group and a familiar figure in Nigeria’s oil, gas and power sectors. Through Kaztec, he pursued a $1 billion fabrication yard on Snake Island in Lagos, promoting local engineering capacity.
He also owns a major stake in Enugu Electricity Distribution Company and heads the Sir Emeka Offor Foundation, which supports health and education initiatives. Critics argued the London case symbolized how ambitious expansion in Nigeria’s energy industry can clash with global financial expectations. Supporters countered that the turbulence reflects market volatility rather than any intent to evade obligations.
According to Billionaires Africa, settlement details remain confidential, and the underlying $111 million claim is not fully resolved. But the stay gives Offor and Kaztec a window to negotiate refinancing, restructuring, or an out-of-court resolution. The breathing space may determine whether Kaztec can reclaim ground in Nigeria’s crowded oil-services sector.


