Country intelligence · 2026

African freight corridors, as they actually are.

The 11 priority countries we're building the founding cohort around. Trade flows, infrastructure reality, recent developments, and what Coalition members in each market typically contribute and gain. The page exists to prove a claim: the Coalition is built by operators who can write this page, and most networks aren't.

Region

Southern Africa

Six interlocking economies, three coastal, three landlocked, where corridor selection is now an active strategic decision per shipment, not a default.

01

South Africa

The continent's largest economy is also its most operationally fragile logistics market. Transnet's parastatal collapse (locomotive shortages, derailments, signal failures, container dwell times that periodically exceeded Mombasa's through 2023–24) has pushed sophisticated forwarders into permanent contingency-planning mode. The rail freight migration to road that everyone knows is unsustainable continues anyway. Eskom load-shedding hits cold chain and any temperature-controlled cargo.

Walvis Bay and Maputo are quietly absorbing volume that Durban can no longer absorb reliably. South African forwarders are the best-trained operators on the continent because their environment forces it; what they need from a coalition isn't basic capability, it's leverage. Collective negotiation with shipping lines that have started treating SA as a problem market, and access to corridor alternatives the major networks treat as Plan C.

Members typically contribute

Depth on the most complex logistics terrain in Africa.

Members typically gain

Structural alternatives to Transnet exposure, plus partnership routing into markets where SA capability is rare.

02

Namibia

Walvis Bay is no longer a "small port that punches above its weight" cliché. It's a strategic Plan A for SADC transit cargo whenever Durban falters. The Walvis Bay Corridor Group routes into Botswana, Zambia, Zimbabwe, and the DRC copperbelt, and the Trans-Kalahari and Trans-Caprivi corridors are operational, not aspirational.

Layered on top: the Orange Basin oil discoveries (TotalEnergies, Shell, Galp, since 2022) have created a deepwater oil and gas logistics market that didn't exist three years ago. Mining cargo (uranium, lithium) continues. The domestic market is small; the corridor and project-cargo opportunity is disproportionate.

Members typically contribute

Alternative-corridor expertise that becomes more valuable every year SA falters.

Members typically gain

Visibility into upstream oil and gas project work that international partners need a credible Namibian counterpart for.

03

Mozambique

Three coastal ports (Maputo, Beira, Nacala) each serving different hinterlands, plus Pemba in the north. Beira is the lifeline for Zimbabwe, Malawi, Zambia, and parts of the DRC; the Beira Corridor's road and rail spine carries traffic Beira itself doesn't generate. Maputo competes with Durban for the Witbank–Johannesburg hinterland and is winning some of it. Nacala's deepwater port handles Tete coal exports and Malawi/Zambia transit via the Nacala Logistics Corridor.

Cabo Delgado LNG (TotalEnergies) is restarting in stages after the 2021 suspension; Coral Sul FLNG (Eni) has been operating offshore since 2022.

Members typically contribute

Corridor expertise. A Maputo or Beira forwarder is doing something every day that a Lusaka or Lilongwe member depends on.

Members typically gain

Visibility into LNG and gas project cargo as the security situation stabilizes.

04

Zambia

Landlocked, copper-anchored, and at a corridor inflection point. The Lobito Corridor (US-backed rail rehabilitation linking the Angolan port of Lobito to the Zambian and Congolese copperbelt) moved its first cobalt train in 2024 and is the most-watched African infrastructure story of this decade. TAZARA, under renewed Chinese investment since 2024, is being rehabilitated as the eastern alternative.

Beira, Durban, and Walvis Bay remain options; corridor selection is now an active strategic decision per shipment, not a default. The 2024 G20 Common Framework debt restructuring closed a multi-year overhang.

Members typically contribute

Real-time corridor intelligence at the most actively shifting routing junction in Southern Africa.

Members typically gain

Leverage with carriers across four corridor options instead of being captive to one.

05

Zimbabwe

Landlocked, minerals-rich, and operationally complex. Lithium has joined gold and platinum as a major export driver since the 2022–24 Chinese investment wave (Bikita, Sabi Star, Arcadia). USD is the de facto trade currency since 2022; the ZiG, introduced April 2024, complicates domestic transactions but rarely freight.

Trade routes: Beira primarily, Durban secondary, Walvis Bay opportunistically. Customs friction and currency administration are the operational tax that every shipment pays.

Members typically contribute

Capability to operate a forwarder business in a market most networks code as "too hard."

Members typically gain

International partnerships that go around the customary Western reluctance to engage Zimbabwe directly.

06

Malawi

Small economy, landlocked, and disproportionately dependent on the Beira and Nacala corridors. Tobacco, tea, sugar dominate exports; consumer goods imports drive most freight volume. FX shortages were chronic through 2023–24 and remain a real operational variable. The Nacala Logistics Corridor (rail to Mozambique's Nacala port) is the underused alternative to road via Beira.

Members typically contribute

Ground truth on a market that's small but corridor-strategic for any partner moving Tete coal, Zambian copper, or DRC minerals through Mozambique.

Members typically gain

Scale. Alone, a Malawian forwarder has limited shipping line relevance; via the Coalition, their volume is part of a Southern African aggregate.

Region

East Africa

Two coastal hubs feeding four landlocked economies. The Northern and Central Corridors are no longer a default-and-fallback pair. They're an active arbitrage members trade between weekly.

07

Tanzania

Dar es Salaam is the gateway for landlocked Burundi, Rwanda, Uganda, Zambia, DRC, and Malawi. The 2023 DP World concession to operate the port for 30 years was politically contested but operationally consequential. Productivity is improving, dwell times are coming down, customs are modernizing. Standard Gauge Railway Dar–Dodoma is operational since 2024 and extending.

EACOP (East African Crude Oil Pipeline) from Lake Albert in Uganda to Tanga port is under construction, with first oil targeted 2026. Bagamoyo deepwater port remains officially "under review". Assume not happening soon.

Members typically contribute

Gateway expertise to six landlocked economies that combined exceed Kenya's import volume.

Members typically gain

Partnership flow on EACOP-related project cargo and on the SGR-driven shift in inland routing economics.

08

Kenya

Mombasa remains East Africa's largest container port; the SGR (Mombasa–Nairobi–Naivasha) is operational and freight share continues to grow. Lamu Port (deepwater, partially operational since 2021) is the long-term LAPSSET corridor play (Kenya–Ethiopia–South Sudan), still finding its commercial use case.

Nairobi is the services capital and the regional logistics-decision center; the Adani JKIA airport deal collapsed in late 2024 and the Kenya Ports Authority is back in the operational driver's seat. The Northern Corridor handles Uganda, Rwanda, South Sudan, and eastern DRC transit, the highest-value transit lane in Africa by some measures.

Members typically contribute

Command of the most concentrated decision-making market in African logistics.

Members typically gain

International partnership routing that recognizes Kenya's hub role rather than treating it as one country among many.

09

Uganda

Landlocked, transit-dependent, and at an oil inflection point. First oil from Lake Albert (Tilenga–TotalEnergies, Kingfisher–CNOOC) is targeted 2026; EACOP construction is the largest current logistics project in East Africa.

The Northern Corridor via Mombasa remains primary; the Central Corridor via Dar es Salaam has gained share through 2022–25 as Mombasa congestion variability prompted shippers to diversify. The 2023 AGOA suspension over LGBT legislation removed US preferential market access, a meaningful blow to garment and processed agricultural exporters that has not been reversed.

Members typically contribute

Corridor-arbitrage capability and oil-sector logistics readiness.

Members typically gain

Visibility into project cargo for EACOP and upstream oil; alternative-market routing as AGOA replacement.

10

Rwanda

Landlocked, governance-strong, and the "easy market" of East Africa for international partners. But easy doesn't mean simple. Northern Corridor via Mombasa is primary; Central Corridor via Dar increasingly used as Mombasa weather patterns change.

The Bugesera new airport project (Qatar Airways partnership, under construction) targets regional hub status. Kigali is a credible second destination for any Pan-African business that wants a base outside Nairobi or Addis. Customs execution is the best in the EAC bloc.

Members typically contribute

An operating environment that international partners trust, which is rare on the continent.

Members typically gain

Positioning as the Central African gateway for partners targeting Burundi, eastern DRC, and the broader Lakes region.

Region

West Africa

One country, sized like a region. The reset in Lagos since 2023 has changed what's possible.

11

Nigeria

Largest economy, most populated, most consumed. Lagos has been the bottleneck of African logistics for two decades (Apapa and Tin Can ports legendary for congestion), but the 2023 opening of Lekki Deep Sea Port is genuinely transformative. First deepwater port in Nigeria, container terminal operational, transhipment-capable. Volume migration from Apapa is real and accelerating.

Compounding: the 2023 Naira devaluation (from ~460 to 1,500+ vs USD), petroleum subsidy removal, and Nigerian Customs Service reforms (e-customs, Time Release Studies) have reset the operating environment in 18 months. AGOA participation continues. The market is enormous, the operational variability is intense, and the rewards for navigating it are disproportionate.

Members typically contribute

Market depth on the single most consequential consumer economy in Africa.

Members typically gain

International partner routing that recognizes Nigeria's distinct economy rather than treating it as just another node, and access to West African corridor positioning that East- and Southern-Africa-only networks lack.

What's missing, and why

The 11 countries above don't cover Africa. Egypt, Morocco, Algeria, Senegal, Côte d'Ivoire, Ghana, Cameroon, Angola, DRC, and Ethiopia are obvious gaps for a Pan-African coalition. Some are deliberately deferred until the founding cohort proves the model.

Telling prospective members which countries we're holding seats open for, and which we're not actively recruiting in yet, is itself a credibility move. We'd rather build the Coalition deliberately than claim a footprint we can't operationally back.

If you operate in a market not on this list and believe the Coalition would be stronger with you in it, tell us.

The next step

If you operate in any of these markets, we want to talk.