According to www.heavyliftpfi.com, African specialist shipping operators Breadbox Shipping Lines and Universal Africa Lines (UAL) are jointly adding eight new vessels to their fleets by late 2026 — four 3,800 dwt gearless coasters and four 5,800 dwt geared tweendeck vessels — as part of a coordinated push to strengthen breakbulk and project cargo capacity across West, Central, and Southern Africa.
Fleet Modernisation with Dual-Fuel & Energy-Efficiency Features
Breadbox’s NB3800 project delivers four 3,800 dwt gearless coasters by end-2026. As stated by Bakker, these vessels are “specifically designed to fit our trading pattern, combining an excellent speed-to-consumption ratio with readiness for the energy transition, featuring designs adaptable to future alternative fuels and wind assistance.” In parallel, Breadbox is developing a follow-on series of four geared 5,800 dwt tweendeck vessels, aimed at enhancing flexibility, cargo handling, and energy efficiency in West Africa.
UAL Africa, under Managing Director Harald Maas, has also ordered a new series of vessels currently under construction. These ships feature dual-fuel capability — the option to switch between conventional fuel and greener alternatives — along with silicone-based hull paint to reduce barnacle growth and drag, and the AXE-bow design to cut through waves rather than slam into them. Maas confirmed:
“We are constantly exploring new technologies to be able to reduce our emissions.” — Harald Maas, Managing Director, UAL Africa
AI Integration and Operational Risk Mitigation
Breadbox is embedding artificial intelligence across chartering and operations, including a proprietary risk analyser that integrates historical port data, weather patterns, bunkering options, and operational constraints. According to Bakker, this tool improves voyage estimations, budgeting, and scenario planning:
“By integrating data-driven insights with hands-on operational experience, Breadbox is building a more predictable, safer, and more efficient operating model.” — Bakker
Service Network Expansion & Regional Growth
UAL has relaunched its direct liner service between Northwest Europe and East/South Africa, calling at Mozambique (including Afungi), Tanzania, Kenya, and South Africa — complementing its existing West Africa services. Meanwhile, a new coastal breakbulk liner service connecting Dar es Salaam (Tanzania) and Mombasa (Kenya), focused on southbound cargoes into South Africa, is being launched via a joint sales effort involving Afrilink Ocean and UPF Group.
UPF Group recently opened an office in Douala, Cameroon — joining existing offices in Mozambique, Tanzania, South Africa, Namibia, and Kenya — marking a strategic expansion across Southern, Eastern, and Central Africa.
Operational Challenges and Market Opportunities
Bakker underscored persistent challenges in West Africa: piracy and security risks (though improved), port congestion, infrastructure limitations — especially at secondary ports — and weather disruptions, including the rainy season and winter storms in load regions. Yet demand remains robust, driven by large-scale mining, oil and gas, energy, and onshore infrastructure projects requiring experienced operators with suitable tonnage and local knowledge.
The Suez Canal disruption is also reshaping flows: Maas noted that many carriers now reroute via the Cape of Good Hope, increasing pressure on Africa-focused lines. He added:
“We feel the impact of the Suez Canal closing… A lot of our colleagues go over the Cape of Good Hope now, so we do feel that cargo is moving with shipping lines that are predominantly strong in the Middle and Far East.” — Harald Maas, Managing Director, UAL Africa
Additionally, shifting production — such as the near-total relocation of the chemical market from Europe to Asia — is directly affecting cargo volumes and routing decisions.
Context for Supply Chain Professionals
Africa’s maritime logistics sector has long been characterised by fragmented infrastructure, regulatory heterogeneity, and reliance on ageing tonnage. Between 2020 and 2023, only 12% of vessels calling at major West African ports were built after 2010, according to UNCTAD’s Review of Maritime Transport 2023. The current wave of newbuilds by Breadbox and UAL represents one of the largest coordinated fleet modernisations in the region since the early 2010s. Similar investments have been seen elsewhere: in 2022, Grindrod Shipping acquired three modern 5,000 dwt tweendeckers for West Africa deployment; in 2023, Nile Dutch introduced two new 4,500 dwt geared vessels on its West Africa loop. For supply chain professionals, these developments signal improved reliability in breakbulk and project cargo delivery — but also heightened expectations for real-time visibility, documentation accuracy, and just-in-time coordination with port authorities and inland hauliers, particularly where digital port systems remain underdeveloped.
Source: www.heavyliftpfi.com
Compiled from international media by the SCI.AI editorial team.










