News Finances

Nigeria’s Heirs Energy secures $750mln Afreximbank loan to lift oil output

Nigeria’s Heirs Energy secures $750mln Afreximbank loan to lift oil output
Monday, 22 December 2025 07:25
  • Five-year reserve-based facility signed in Abuja on December 20
  • Funding combines debt refinancing with new capital for upstream growth
  • Output target set at about 100,000 barrels per day

Heirs Energy, a Nigerian oil and gas company controlled by banker Tony Elumelu, has secured a $750 million financing facility from Afreximbank to support the expansion of its upstream operations. The agreement, signed in Abuja on December 20, is structured as a five-year reserve-based loan and combines the refinancing of existing debt with new capital earmarked for production growth.

The transaction comes after several years of balance sheet cleanup. When Heirs Energy acquired the OML 17 oil mining lease in 2021 from Shell, Total, and Eni, it raised about $1.1 billion. Most of that amount has been repaid after nearly four years of operations. The new facility is designed to improve the company’s financial structure while restoring room for investment.

Elumelu described the deal as evidence of growing confidence by African financial institutions in African-owned companies. He highlighted Afreximbank’s role in backing large projects led by local players, calling the Bank a central force in financing African businesses at scale. He said Afreximbank is playing a decisive role in Heirs Energy’s ambition to build a resilient, African-owned energy group.

On the operational side, Heirs Energy currently produces more than 50,000 barrels of oil per day and around 120 million cubic meters of gas. The company plans to raise output to about 100,000 barrels per day and 250 million cubic meters of gas over the medium term. This growth strategy is based mainly on optimizing existing fields and improving the commercial use of associated gas, with no major new drilling programs announced so far.

For Afreximbank, the deal aligns with its broader push to support Africa’s energy sector. Its president, George Elombi, said energy stability is essential to macroeconomic balance across many African economies and noted that several multibillion-dollar financing operations are being prepared. He stressed the Bank’s long-term commitment, as an Africa-owned institution, to supporting the sector through both favorable cycles and periods of stress.

The transaction also reflects the growing weight of Nigerian independent producers as international oil majors continue to exit onshore and shallow-water assets. Heirs Energy is part of this trend, alongside companies such as Seplat and Renaissance Africa Energy, which have taken over fields sold by multinational groups. According to Nigerian regulators, local companies now account for between 50% and 60% of national oil production, up from about 40% a few years ago.

Olivier de Souza

On the same topic
Africa-based investors accounted for 30% of active VC players in 2025 Total VC funding reached $3.9 billion across 506 deals Venture debt jumped...
Cameroon will issue the first 15-year OTA in CEMAC on February 17, 2026. The Treasury seeks CFA20 billion to test demand beyond the 10-year...
IFC considers up to $8 million in Aruwa Fund II $50 million fund targets Nigerian, Ghanaian SMEs Focus on women-led firms in underserved...
Vista acquires 99.99% of Saham Assurances Niger Company rebranded as Vista Assurances Niger Deal marks entry into Niger’s small insurance...
Most Read
01

Absa Kenya hires M-PESA’s Sitoyo Lopokoiyit, signalling a shift from branch banking to a telecom-s...

Absa Kenya Imports a Telecom Playbook in Bid to Reinvent Retail Banking
02

Ziidi Trader enables NSE share trading via M-Pesa M-Pesa revenue rose 15.2% to 161.1 billio...

Safaricom launches M-Pesa platform for stock trading in Kenya
03

Deposits grow 2.7%, supporting lending recovery Average loan sizes small, credit risk persists ...

Togo Microfinance: Deposits and Loans Rise Simultaneously in Q3 2025
04

Oil majors expand offshore exploration from Senegal to Angola Gulf of Guinea accounts for about 1...

Gulf of Guinea regains appeal as a key exploration hub for oil majors
05

MTN Group has no official presence in the Democratic Republic of Congo, where the mobile market is d...

DRC Accuses MTN of Illegal Operations, Spotlighting Border Frequency Issues
Enter your email to receive our newsletter

Ecofin Agency provides daily coverage of nine key African economic sectors: public management, finance, telecoms, agribusiness, mining, energy, transport, communication, and education.
It also designs and manages specialized media, both online and print, for African institutions and publishers.

SALES & ADVERTISING

regie@agenceecofin.com 
Tél: +41 22 301 96 11 
Mob: +41 78 699 13 72


EDITORIAL
redaction@agenceecofin.com

More information
Team
Publisher

ECOFIN AGENCY

Mediamania Sarl
Rue du Léman, 6
1201 Geneva
Switzerland

 

Ecofin Agency is a sector-focused economic news agency, founded in December 2010. Its web platform was launched in June 2011. ©Mediamania.

 
 

Please publish modules in offcanvas position.