According to www.inonafrica.com, the closure of the Strait of Hormuz on 2 March 2026 triggered an immediate rerouting of global container and oil-cargo vessels around Africa — validating a strategic pivot in African port infrastructure investment from pure capacity expansion to strategic resilience.
Africa’s Infrastructure Pivot: From Growth to Resilience
Historically focused on expanding transport networks to move raw materials to export terminals, African nations are now reconfiguring ports, airports, rail systems, and logistics platforms to withstand environmental stressors and geopolitical disruptions. This shift is evident across conflict-affected states like the Democratic Republic of Congo and Libya — where infrastructure upgrades continued despite instability. As noted by the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD), sustained annual investments of US$155 billion through 2040 could elevate Africa’s transportation infrastructure to parity with much of Asia, Europe, and North America.
Economic & Structural Drivers
Such investment is tightly linked to broader economic goals: achieving industrialisation by enabling local value-addition — for example, processing rare earth elements into EV batteries or refining crude oil domestically — rather than exporting unprocessed commodities. The OECD estimates that this infrastructure modernisation could lift average annual GDP growth to 4.5% by 2040, doubling current growth trajectories and advancing the African Union’s Agenda 2063 target of 7% annual GDP growth.
Transportation dominates Africa’s infrastructure spending needs, accounting for the largest share of required investment. According to OECD data:
- Roads: 32% of total transportation investment
- Railways: 24%
- Maintenance of existing infrastructure: 42% of transportation investment
Airports are also expanding cargo-handling capacity, while river ports and inland logistics systems — including warehousing and multimodal terminals — receive growing attention. Crucially, Afrobarometer’s 2023 survey confirms that poor infrastructure remains the most urgent issue Africans want governments to address, granting policymakers strong public mandate to proceed.
Geopolitical Catalysts: Hormuz and Suez Disruptions
The 2026 Hormuz closure followed earlier strain on Africa’s ports from the October 2023 de facto closure of the Suez Canal due to militant activity in the Gulf of Aden and Red Sea. In both cases, major carriers — including Maersk, CMA CGM, and Hapag-Lloyd — diverted vessels to the Cape of Good Hope route around South Africa. Oil tankers especially shifted southward to ensure uninterrupted delivery to international markets.
While the detour added two weeks of sailing time and contributed to higher global oil prices, it exposed Africa’s latent capacity — and its urgent need for adaptable infrastructure. As the article observes:
“No matter how modern and sizeable an African seaport becomes after investment in upgrades, the facility cannot be utilised if the shipping routes leading to and from it are insecure. Ships will sail to other ports if necessary.”
Strategic Adaptations Underway
To mitigate such vulnerabilities, African governments are diversifying infrastructure partnerships — moving away from overreliance on single foreign suppliers (e.g., Germany for rail hardware or China for construction) toward greater use of public-private partnerships (PPPs). Regional integration has accelerated: national road and rail networks now interlock as components of continental corridors, including the African highway system. This integration supports implementation of the African Continental Free Trade Agreement (AfCFTA) and expands routing redundancy — offering shippers viable alternatives when storms or conflict disrupt key corridors.
Source: www.inonafrica.com
Compiled from international media by the SCI.AI editorial team.










