DP World plans to spend $3 billion over the next three to five years on new port and logistics infrastructure in Africa to meet long-term growth that includes surging demand for critical mineral exports.
“The cost of logistics and supply chain across Africa is very high relative to other global markets,” which presents a good opportunity, Mohammed Akoojee, DP World’s chief executive officer and managing director for sub-Saharan Africa, said in an interview on Bloomberg Television. The port operator is expanding in Dar es Salaam in Tanzania and has recently assessed harbours in South Africa and Kenya for potential investment.
DP World will focus US$2 billion of the upcoming investment on ports, specifically, and US$1 billion on the logistics business, he said.
Eight of the world’s 15 fastest-growing economies will be in Africa this year, according to the International Monetary Fund. That’s luring companies including Dubai-based DP World, despite economic pain from accelerating inflation, depreciating currencies and high borrowing costs in the region.
Africa’s potential should be viewed over the long term, not by short-term macroeconomics, according to Akoojee. “It’s a cycle and it certainly hasn’t impacted our appetite for growth on the continent,” he said. “We’re still investing.”
A booming market for critical minerals including copper from Zambia and the Democratic Republic of Congo are helping drive the need for greater logistics capacity, Akoojee said. “We’ve seen demand increasing over the last few years, largely driven by the whole electrification drive globally and the demand for commodities like cobalt, lithium.”
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DP World ’s Africa unit has 27,000 workers and covers ports, terminals, logistics and supply chain businesses. It failed in a bid to partner South Africa’s Transnet SOC to develop the biggest container port on the continent, losing to International Container Terminal Services, which is owned by Filipino billionaire Enrique Razon.
That hasn’t deterred the company from looking to continue its expansion on the continent. As South Africa moves forward on the partial privatisation of Transnet, “we remain interested in those opportunities”, Akoojee said. DP World is also looking at the port of Lamu in Kenya, where there’s also a privatisation process underway. BLOOMBERG