Sultan Ahmed bin Sulayem, the chief executive of DP World, said: “This is part of our vision to act as an enabler of trade and to facilitate growth by helping African countries develop their infrastructure that connects them to global markets.”
Somaliland’s economy, 60% of which is made up of livestock exports, should receive a boost from increased transit fees and the new free-trade zone.
However, the main function of the port is to provide another connection between Ethiopia and global markets, and a transshipment hub where large container ships can offload their freight to feeder ships able to negotiate the Horn of Africa’s shallow ports.
DP World will pay Somaliland will pay $5m a year as well as 10% of all port revenue.
Muse Biihi, the chairman of Somaliland’s ruling Kulmiye party, said: “We intend to transform Berbera into a hub for East Africa and develop a free trade zone.”
DP World took over the port in May last year. It has a 65% stake in the operating company, which itself has a 30-year concession with a possible 10-year extension. The $442m investment was a condition of that deal. Somaliland will own the remainder.
Port politics
Matt Bryden, executive chairman of Nairobi think tank Sahan, told Dow Jones Newswire that the deal reflects “the recent cooling of relations between the UAE and Djibouti”. The development of Berbera challenges Djibouti’s monopoly over the landlocked markets of Ethiopia, Sudan and South Sudan.
Doraleh is expanding, too
The $590m complex, opened on 24 May, includes a container terminal with a yard capacity of 200,000 teu, a breakbulk terminal able to handle 6 million tonnes a year, a bulk terminal with a capacity of 2 million tonnes a year and a RoRo terminal with 40,000 vehicle park slots.
The project was begun in 2015 and was financed jointly by the Djibouti Ports and Free Zones Authority, an arm of the Djibouti government, and Hong Kong’s China Merchant Holding.
The port was equipped by the Chinese firm ZPMC and ships have already started calling at the facility, the port authority said.
Top image: The port as it is now (Creative Commons)
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