African Port Rankings 2024: North Africa Leads, Sub-Saharan Ports Struggle
The 2024 Container Port Performance Index (CPPI) serves as a continental report card, revealing not just which African ports are improving, but painting a broader picture of trade health, investment priorities, and logistical bottlenecks. The data reveals a tale of two Africas: one with ports competing on a global stage, and another struggling with fundamental efficiency challenges.
While headlines focus on individual climbers like Dakar, the real story lies in the persistent gap between North Africa’s Mediterranean giants and the ports serving the vast sub-Saharan market. This divide has direct consequences for the cost of goods, regional integration, and economic competitiveness.
The Top Tier: Global Contenders on Africa’s Northern Coast
Port Said (Egypt) and Tangier Med (Morocco) are not just African leaders; they are global benchmarks, ranking 3rd and 5th worldwide respectively. Their success is not accidental but the result of strategic vision:
- Strategic Positioning: Both ports act as crucial hubs on the major shipping lanes between Asia and Europe, incentivizing massive investment to capture transshipment traffic.
- Heavy Investment: State-of-the-art automation, deep-water berths, and extensive intermodal connections (rail, road) allow for rapid vessel turnaround.
- Economic Zones: They are integrated with large industrial and logistics zones, ensuring a consistent flow of cargo and adding value beyond simple cargo handling.
Their performance confirms their role as gateways not just for their own countries, but for entire regions, setting a high bar for operational excellence.
The Rising Star: Dakar’s Remarkable Leap
Dakar, Senegal, represents the most significant positive story in sub-Saharan Africa. Its jump from a score of -82 to +23 is one of the largest gains globally. This transformation is a direct case study in the impact of targeted investment:
- Catalyst for Change: DP World’s major upgrades, including new cranes and a port community system, streamlined operations.
- Beyond the Port Gates: Critical supporting investments were made, such as road modernization and the rehabilitation of the railway link to landlocked Mali, enhancing the port’s hinterland reach.
- Regulatory Efficiency: The implementation of a customs one-stop shop reduced administrative delays, addressing a key pain point for traders.
Dakar demonstrates that with focused private-sector partnership and infrastructure improvements, rapid progress is achievable.
The Underperformers: Systemic Challenges in Key Economies
The CPPI data highlights severe inefficiencies in ports critical to major economies:
- South Africa’s Crisis: The ports of Durban (-721), Cape Town (-281), and Coega (-284) anchor the bottom of the global ranking. Years of underinvestment, aging equipment, and well-documented operational issues have created a major drag on the continent’s most industrialized economy. Long anchorage times remain a critical failure point.
- West African Giants Lag: Despite being economic powerhouses, ports in Nigeria (Lagos -24, Lekki -17) and Ghana (Tema -166) perform well below potential. Congestion, bureaucratic delays, and infrastructure constraints prevent them from leveraging their natural economic weight.
- Gateways to the Interior: The poor performance of ports like Mombasa, Kenya (-89) and Dar es Salaam, Tanzania (-53) is particularly concerning. As vital gateways for landlocked nations in East and Central Africa, their inefficiencies have a cascading effect, increasing costs for millions of people inland.
Root Causes: Why the Efficiency Gap Persists
The report identifies common threads behind the struggling ports:
- Aging Infrastructure: Many ports operate with outdated equipment unable to handle modern vessel sizes and volumes efficiently.
- Limited Technological Adoption: A lack of port community systems and digitalization leads to manual processes, paperwork delays, and poor visibility.
- Institutional Bottlenecks: Cumbersome customs procedures and complex regulations create significant non-physical delays, often outweighing the time spent on actual cargo handling.
- Landside Connectivity: Even if a port is efficient, gains are lost if containers cannot be quickly moved via congested roads or inadequate rail links to their final destination.
Consequences for Trade and Commerce
The state of African ports is not just a shipping issue; it’s an economic one:
- Higher Costs: Inefficiency translates directly into higher freight costs and longer shipping times, which are ultimately passed on to consumers and businesses. This makes African exports less competitive and imports more expensive.
- Stifled Regional Trade: The difficulty of moving goods reliably between African countries is a major barrier to implementing the African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA).
- Investor Perception: Poor port performance is a significant red flag for manufacturers and logistics companies considering investments, as it introduces supply chain uncertainty.
A Glimmer of Hope: The Path Forward
The improvements in Dakar and Cotonou prove that decline is not inevitable. The formula for success involves:
- Public-Private Partnerships (PPPs): Attracting experienced international operators can bring capital and expertise, as seen with DP World in Dakar.
- Holistic Planning: Investing in the port must be matched with investments in connecting infrastructure (roads, rail) and regulatory reform.
- Digitalization: Implementing port community systems that connect all stakeholders (shipping lines, customs, haulers) is a cost-effective way to slash delays.
Conclusion: The CPPI index is more than a ranking; it is a diagnostic tool. It shows that while North Africa has successfully integrated into global logistics networks, sub-Saharan Africa’s ports remain a critical bottleneck to its economic ambitions. Closing this efficiency gap is not merely a logistical project—it is a prerequisite for unleashing continental trade, boosting competitiveness, and ultimately achieving food security and economic prosperity.














