What's happening in Mediterranean & Africa

 

Mediterranean & Africa
Trade Specialists
 

 

Headway Speed Transportation
Co., Ltd.

Make perfect logistic service! H.S.T
create with you!
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Highroad International Logistics

Professional door to door service
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Panda Logistics Co., Ltd.
Qingdao Branch

Qingdao's leading consolidator and
comprehensive logistics service
provider
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.

Choice Int'l Forwarding Co Ltd. 

Your Best Choice to Africa
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Awards Shipping Agency Ltd.

From humble beginnings to full
global air and seafreight logistics
service provider.
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 With a strong dollar, US consumers have money to spend on imports
    from Africa
  
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 Euro-Mediterranean partnership encompassing North Africa still a work
   in progress
  
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 Barcelona: Challenging all for the Mediterranean's logistics crown  
    
More....

 If Cape route makes sense on the back-haul, it might make sense on
   head-haul too  
More....
 

 

State of African ports around the continent port by port
assessed

 


IN this report, Port Overview Africa, long-time observer of world shipping Victor Shih, now editor of PortOverview.com and analyst Kasper Hansen of Sea Intel Maritime Analysis, undertook a technical tour of the continent's ports and their progress.

They report overall improvement in average reliability on both Europe and Asian services into African ports. Average on-time arrival within +/- 1 day of schedule is up from 64 per cent to 73 per cent for Asia-Africa (based on 1,840 arrivals) and 46 per cent to 60 per cent for Europe-Africa (based on 1,846 arrivals).

As for African exports - reliability is normally quite high comparatively for the Africa-Asia route - the figure remains down by just three per cent at 77 per cent versus the first half of the year figure of 80 per cent (based on 3,567 arrivals).

However, the Africa-Europe trade has experienced a massive 22 per cent jump in reliability from 50 per cent to 72 per cent on routes from South and West Africa (based on 1,563 arrivals).

The major reasons behind these improvements in sea-leg reliability may be related to slowing volumes in many African ports. The main causes have been macroeconomic, as the combination of lower oil and commodity prices combined with the relative slowdown of the Chinese and other Asian economies have begun to bite.

With the notable exceptions of Morocco, Djibouti and Kenya, recent updates from a number of the port authorities point toward a quiet six months. African economies have in the past felt the impact of downturns or upswings in the global economy some months after main events have taken place.

The Kenya Ports Authority claim a 10.8 per cent increase in cargo volumes at Mombasa to 809,984 TEU in the first three quarters of 2015 compared to 731,300 TEU in 2014.

A lot of the growth has been seen in the trade between the Indian subcontinent and the Horn of Africa/East Africa, with a number of lines increasing capacity and frequency of services between the two continents.

Mid-range Abidjan has experienced periodic congestion and has only just commenced the expansion second terminal after a protracted dispute on the bidding process.

Ghana's Tema port suffered a series of power cuts that also affected Accra and the surroundings, but Meridian Port Services (the JV between APM Terminals and Bollor-Africa Logistics) is pressing ahead with its US$3 billion expansion.

There have been prolonged protests at the new terminal at Lome in Togo when the PAL authorities introduced a security access system to only a selected number of vetted forwarders and customs clearance agents, leading to the entry being blockaded for several days.

In Nigeria, volumes have been significantly affected not only by the low oil price, but also by the diversion of cargo to neighbouring countries' ports as a result of the continuous feuding between the various parties vying for control of the ports around Lagos.

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