Morocco: The African Development Bank provides €57 million in additional financing for construction of the Nador West Med port complex

At the crossroads of important container and hydrocarbon transport routes, the Kingdom of Morocco is consolidating its presence on the world’s maritime routes. Here the port of Tangier Med.

The Board of Directors of the African Development Bank Group, has approved additional financing of 57 million euros for construction of the Nador West Med port complex in Morocco.

The new financing tranche follows an earlier one of nearly 113 million euros that the African Development Bank extended in 2015.

The Nador West Med project entails construction of two terminals for twenty-foot-equivalent containers with a capacity of three million tonnes, a specialized bulk berth of four million tonnes and a general cargo terminal of 33 million tonnes. The port facilities will be complemented by an integrated economic zone featuring commercial, industrial, logistics and tertiary hubs, and which is expected to create jobs.

Mohamed El Azizi, African Development Bank Group Director General, North Africa Regional Development and Business Delivery Office, said “The construction of this new deep-water port infrastructure at the crossroads of major container and hydrocarbon transport routes consolidates the presence of the Kingdom of Morocco in the world’s sea lanes. It will enhance the attractiveness of Morocco’s Oriental region and be a major accelerator for development and regional integration.”

Achraf Hassan Tarsim, African Development Bank Country Manager for Morocco, said: “Nador West Med shows how state of the art infrastructure, designed in harmony with its environment and territory, can transform an entire region, opening it up to the world through development of new industrial sectors and the creation of thousands of jobs.”

Nador West Med will increase the logistics competitiveness of Morocco’s economy and secure the country’s supply of hydrocarbons, attracting part of the international maritime traffic that passes through the Mediterranean basin. The project confirms Morocco’s commitment to strengthening its anchorage in the African space.

The new infrastructure will also offer synergies with Tanger Med port, which began operations in 2004.

The African Development Bank has been active in Morocco for over 50 years, during which it has provided funding for projects in the country’s health, water, agriculture, transport, energy, human development and financial sectors.

Source & photo : afdb