Focus on African Ports and Hinterland Connectivity

September 20, 2018

When a ship comes into port it may be the end of a voyage, but just the beginning of a range of administrative tasks that need to be completed.

The port is unlikely to be the final destination for the cargo – which will need to be unloaded and forwarded in a variety of ways. This requires logistics and infrastructure that connects the port to other inland places and regions – known as ‘hinterland connectivity’.  

This was the issue under the spotlight at the first regional conference of The International Association of Ports and Harbors (IAPH) in Abuja, Nigeria (17-19 September), inaugurated by the President of Nigeria.

The conference brought together African ports, port operators, corridor management organisations and international organisations (including the WTO, World Bank, UNCTAD, European Commission, African Union, African Development Bank and Pan-African Association for Port Cooperation, together with ports from Asia, Europe and the US)  to discuss the subject in the context of Africa – a continent in which 15 of 54 countries are landlocked.

Africa is the world's second largest and second most-populous continent, with six of the ten fastest-growing economies in the world.

International Maritime Organization (IMO) took part in the event, as part of the Organization’s on-going efforts to strengthen its cooperation with ports and to encourage their participation in the work of IMO.

A key IMO treaty concerning Facilitation of International Maritime Traffic (FAL) regulates and streamlines the administrative tasks as ships come into port. These include declarations of cargo, import and export permits and many more. When properly applied, FAL helps shipments move more quickly, easily and efficiently.

Logistics News

Contship Introduces First Electric Port Tractor into Operations

Contship Introduces First Electric Port Tractor into Operations

ABS, HD KSOE Collaborate for Digital Shipbuilding, Vessel Intelligence

ABS, HD KSOE Collaborate for Digital Shipbuilding, Vessel Intelligence

UTC Overseas, Transoceanic Launch US Gulf Coast Logistics Joint Venture

UTC Overseas, Transoceanic Launch US Gulf Coast Logistics Joint Venture

US Container Imports Fall 3.2% in April, Descartes Reports

US Container Imports Fall 3.2% in April, Descartes Reports

Subscribe for Maritime Logistics Professional E‑News

Spirit Airlines' grounding may help to ease shortages of engines in a tight market
UK warships deployed to Middle East in anticipation of possible Hormuz missions
British paratroopers drop hantavirus-suspected samples on Tristan da Cunha