Krzysztof Cichocki

Krzysztof Cichocki

Partner, attorney-at-law

Has worked at SK&S since 1998 and became a Partner in 2009. His expertise covers energy law, public procurement and real estate law. Advises on construction and infrastructure projects. Has gained extensive experience in industrial (greenfield) projects in special economic zones. Also provides advice on real estate loan transactions, construction contracts (FIDIC and non-FIDIC), including public procurement procedures, as well as in administrative proceedings concerned with construction projects. A member of the Energy Law Group

CONTACT
Phone:+48 22 608 70 51
Mobile phone:+48 694 433 008
Fax:+48 22 608 70 70
Education
  • University of Cambridge – Centre for European Legal Studies – 1998
  • Central European University, Budapest – 1997 (LL.M. – 1998)
  • Adam Mickiewicz University in Poznań – MA in Law – 1997
  • Asser Institute, the Hague – 1997
conferences
  • Polish Iraqi Economic Forum
Experience
  • His expertise covers energy law, public procurement and real estate law
  • Advises on construction and infrastructure projects
  • Has gained extensive experience in industrial (greenfield) projects in special economic zones
  • Provides advice on real estate loan transactions
RECOMMENDATIONS
  • Legal 500 – Energy and natural resources
  • IFLR1000 – Corporate and M&A, Energy and infrastructure, Project development
PUBLICATIONS

Dear Sirs,

We would like to inform you that in recent days, fraudulent emails impersonating our law firm have appeared online. In some cases, these emails include alleged invoices issued by SK&S.

Such fraudulent emails can be identified as they are sent from unusual, unknown addresses that do not belong to our domain. Additionally, these messages are often sent from addresses deceptively similar to those of legitimate senders. We want to emphasize that our law firm has no connection to these emails. All official correspondence from us is sent exclusively from addresses within the domain @skslegal.pl.

We have reported this matter to the Police, specifically to the Central Bureau for Combating Cybercrime, due to suspicions of criminal activity. Please exercise caution: carefully verify the sender’s address and avoid opening any suspicious emails or attachments. If in doubt, we recommend deleting such correspondence immediately.