Tanger Med has ranked #1 in Africa for eight consecutive years and #17 globally in 2024 — outperforming Hamburg. Named the world’s third most efficient port by the World Bank and S&P Global. 10.24 million containers in 2024. This is a global logistics story with Africa at its centre.
Global container port — 2024
TEU — 2024, +18.8% YoY
Tonnes cargo 2024
Consumer market via FTAs
The standard framing of Morocco as a North African trade economy understates the geography significantly. Morocco has dual coastline — Atlantic and Mediterranean — giving it access to the busiest maritime corridors in the world simultaneously. The Strait of Gibraltar, 14 kilometres wide, is the gateway between the Atlantic and Mediterranean, and Tanger Med sits directly at that intersection. That position is not replicable by any competitor in North Africa, West Africa, or the Iberian Peninsula.
The numbers reflect the position. Tanger Med processed 10.24 million TEU in 2024 — an 18.8% increase — and ranked #17 globally, outperforming Hamburg. The World Bank and S&P Global named it the world’s third most efficient port. For eight consecutive years, no African port has challenged its continental primacy. Total cargo throughput reached 142 million tonnes in 2024, up 16.2%.
The argument that Morocco is only a North Africa logistics story ends at Dakhla. The Dakhla Atlantic Port — under development on Morocco’s southern Atlantic coast — is a deliberate bid to become the primary entry point for Sub-Saharan African trade. No other North African country can make that play with the same combination of Atlantic positioning, political stability, EU trade access, and Tanger Med’s established operational model to replicate. OCP’s fertilizer distribution network across 54 African countries is the early proof of concept for what Moroccan infrastructure can do at continental scale.
Morocco’s free trade agreement portfolio creates 2.5 billion consumer market access — encompassing the EU, US (one of only two African countries with preferential US market access), and 50+ other countries. The EU Advanced Status is the crown of this portfolio: a regulatory alignment framework that allows Moroccan exporters to access European markets on terms unavailable to any competitor in the Arab world.
The industrial free zones reinforce the logistics thesis. Tangier Free Zone and Kenitra’s Atlantic Free Zone offer decades-long tax incentives for manufacturers using Morocco as an export platform. Tangier Automotive City hosts 300+ companies and 90,000 jobs; the zone’s automotive throughput feeds directly into Tanger Med’s roll-on/roll-off capacity, which exceeded 500,000 trucks in 2024.
The Tanger Med blueprint — deepwater port, adjacent special economic zone, high-speed rail connection — is now being replicated at Nador West Med and Dakhla Atlantic Port. Morocco is not building one gateway. It is building a network of them.
Morocco’s World Cup infrastructure programme includes $7.5B in port upgrades across 27 ports nationally. The Kenitra port (2030) adds dedicated automotive export capacity. Jorf Lasfar is being upgraded as a hydrogen export hub. Tanger Med expansion increases container capacity ahead of the tournament.
Tanger Med rank (2024)
#17 Global / Africa #1
Container volume (2024)
10.24M TEU (+18.8%)
Cargo throughput (2024
142M tonnes
Port efficiency rank
#3 globally
Consumer market (FTAs)
2.5B people
EU Advanced Status
Only Arab country
Tangier Free Zone jobs
90,000+
Port investment (2030)
$7.5B — 27 ports
Kenitra port opens in 2030. Tanger Med expansion completes. Morocco’s full logistics network reaches capacity parity with its industrial output.
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