18/07/2025
🚢 Reclaiming Africa’s Maritime Future: Why We Must Own 95% of Our Shipping Market.
(By Ray Aikins)
“We are losing over $86 billion yearly to the domination of foreign vessels in our freight business.”
(Capt. Emmanuel Ihenacho, MD of Genesis Shipping, Nigeria)
This quote stopped me in my tracks. Not because I didn’t know Africa was losing value, but because it put a hard number to what we’ve long suspected: Africa’s maritime sector is not ours.
Today, foreign shipping lines control approximately 95% of Africa’s maritime trade, leaving African-owned companies to battle for the remaining 5%. This imbalance is economically unsustainable and strategically dangerous.
❌ The Cost of Outsourcing Our Sea Lanes
Africa pays a steep price for this imbalance:
• $10–$15 billion is estimated to leave the continent annually in freight costs alone.
• Jobs are lost, from seafarers and dock workers to logistics managers and naval engineers.
• Intra-African trade remains expensive and fragmented due to foreign pricing and route priorities.
• Landlocked countries pay a premium just to access international markets.
• Shipping disruptions elsewhere (Red Sea, Suez Canal) ripple into Africa with full force, because we don’t control our trade arteries.
📉 The Data Doesn’t Lie
According to the UNCTAD 2023 Review of Maritime Transport:
• Africa owns only 1.2% of the world’s fleet.
• The continent is home to 38 coastal countries, but only a handful have national or regionally owned shipping lines.
• Freight rates to and from Africa are the highest globally, due to poor infrastructure and lack of competition (UNCTAD, 2023).
🧭 The Missed Opportunity of AfCFTA
The African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA) is designed to boost intra-African trade by over 28% by 2035.
But here’s the catch: Who will carry that trade?
If foreign carriers continue to dominate, AfCFTA becomes yet another wealth-exporting mechanism, instead of a wealth-creating one.
💡 Imagine a Reversal: 95% African-Owned Shipping
Now flip the scenario.
Imagine 95% of Africa’s shipping was owned and operated by African companies, entrepreneurs, and governments. Here’s what would happen:
• Billions retained in local economies.
• Tens of thousands of maritime jobs created.
• More affordable and reliable intra-African shipping routes.
• Faster industrialization, as goods move quickly between African ports.
• Increased geopolitical control over sea lanes and port operations.
It would be a game-changer for economic independence, industrial growth, and long-term resilience.
🔧 How Do We Get There? 7 Solutions
This shift won’t happen overnight, but it must begin now. Here’s how:
1. Create Maritime Investment Funds
African banks, pension funds, and sovereign wealth funds must begin financing vessel acquisition and port infrastructure.
2. Establish National & Regional Shipping Lines
Governments should revive defunct state carriers or launch new ones through transparent public-private partnerships (PPPs).
3. Prioritize Local Shipping Contracts
All government and regional cargo, from oil to food aid, should first go to African-owned carriers, where capacity exists.
4. Build Maritime Training Academies
Develop homegrown talent in ship engineering, seafaring, marine law, and port operations.
5. Support Port and Shipyard Infrastructure
Modernize local ports, dry docks, and repair facilities to reduce downtime and maintenance costs for African fleets.
6. Encourage Regional Maritime Coalitions
Countries can co-own vessels, share fleets, and coordinate coastal shipping through regional economic communities (e.g., ECOWAS, SADC).
7. Embrace Tech for Freight Booking & Transparency
Invest in African-owned digital logistics platforms to streamline cargo handling, pricing, and cross-border movement.
🚀 Africa’s Blue Economy Is Ours to Reclaim
Africa has the longest navigable inland waterways and thousands of kilometers of coastline, yet we are mere passengers in our own maritime journey.
Let’s change that.
Let’s invest in ownership. Let’s build our fleets. Let’s connect our ports.
Let’s sail forward, with purpose, pride, and power.
Are you a policymaker, investor, maritime professional, or entrepreneur ready to take part in Africa’s shipping renaissance?
Let’s connect. Let’s build.
Ray Aikins
Founder, Consultant, and Strategic Operator / RAK Logistics. [email protected] / www.raklogistics.net
🔍 Disclaimer
The 95% vs. 5% figures referenced in this article are strategic approximations based on publicly available maritime trade and fleet ownership data from reputable sources such as UNCTAD, African maritime organizations, and national shipping associations. While the exact percentage may vary by region and year, the central point remains valid: the vast majority of Africa’s shipping activity is currently dominated by foreign-owned companies, with limited ownership and control by African entities. This article presents an analysis intended to spark strategic dialogue and action, not to claim statistical absolutes.