The National - News

DP WORLD AND DEMOCRATIC CONGO TEAM UP FOR $1BN DEEPWATER PORT

Under a 30-year concession, the operator will get 70% of Port of Banana and DRC will hold the remaining 30%

- DEENA KAMEL

DP World, the world’s fourth largest port operator, won a 30-year concession to develop a $1 billion deepwater port along the Congo’s Atlantic coast, as the company forges ahead with plans to expand in Africa despite disputes it faces on the continent.

The Nasdaq-listed global ports operator will manage and develop the greenfield Port of Banana in a joint venture with the government of Democratic Republic of Congo, with the option of a 20-year extension, it said in an emailed statement.

DP World will get a 70 per cent stake and the DRC government keeps a 30 per cent holding in the project.

Constructi­on will start this year and finish in two years.

The project will have “a major impact on the country’s trade with significan­t cost and time savings, attracting more direct calls from larger vessels from Asia and Europe, and ultimately acting as a catalyst for the growth of the country and the region’s economy”, Sultan bin Sulayem, DP World’s group chairman and chief executive, said.

The Congo project extends DP World’s ambitious push to expand in Africa. Congo has long sought to develop a port along its 37-kilometre coast to handle bigger vessels than those that can reach its existing shallow water ports along the Congo river.

The country’s existing ports at Matadi and Boma are inland up the Congo river and are incapable of handling traffic from large cargo liners because of a lack of capacity and draught, according to a PwC study of DRC’s infrastruc­ture. As a result, it relies on transshipm­ents of cargo from Pointe Noire in neighbouri­ng Republic of Congo.

The new port will “dramatical­ly improve” the cost and speed of trade and reduce dependency on neighbouri­ng countries for shipments, Jose Makila, DRC Transport Minister said.

The four-phase project will start with an initial investment of $350 million to build a 600-meter quay with a container capacity of 350,000 TEUs, or twenty-foot equivalent units, and 1.5m tonnes of general cargo. DP World said the investment would be “dependent on market demand, industrial and logistics zone infrastruc­ture”.

“For DP World the investment in Banana is all about the potential that Africa has for growth and the Congo in particular,” Neil Davidson, analyst at Drewry shipping consultanc­y, said.

“At present, Congo’s container volumes are minimal – less than 100,000 TEUs per year – but the country has a large population, plus there are significan­t bulk and breakbulk cargoes.”

For DRC, the project will enhance its position in Africa and its trade connectivi­ty to the world, said Rita Guindy, director at Arqaam Capital.

The state will gain a longterm source of income and could become a small transshipm­ent hub to transport goods to neighbouri­ng countries as the port expands at later phases.

“It will put Congo on the map more than before,” Ms Guindy said. The planned 1.5m tonnes of general cargo capacity will also enhance raw material trade for DRC, Africa’s largest copper producer and the world’s biggest source of cobalt.

The agreement with DP World is a boost of confidence to the Congolese economy battling with reforms and debt. In December, the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund said a deeper recession of the non-oil economy in 2017 was “hurting the most vulnerable segments of the population”.

The Washington-based fund said “the accumulati­on of government arrears is jeopardisi­ng private sector activity, contributi­ng to bank liquidity shortages and underminin­g social services”.

DRC government is saddled with $9.14bn of public debt, equivalent to about 110 per cent of GDP.

Venturing into another foray in Africa is in line with DP World’s focus on emerging and developing markets, but the region comes with uncertaint­ies. “Operating in these geographie­s and economies is always high risk, because they may not continue with the same conditions agreed on or discontinu­e operating at all, but in general it’s more rewarding than developed economies,” Ms Guindy said.

DP World has faced challenges to its African business in recent weeks. In Djibouti, DP World said it would begin arbitratio­n procedures after the government unilateral­ly announced it would end its contract to run the Doraleh Container Terminal.

Earlier this month, Somalia’s lower house voted to reject a deal by Somaliland and DP World to grant a stake in the Port of Berbera to Ethiopia, aggravatin­g the spat between the central government in Mogadishu and the country’s semi-autonomous northern region.

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