Published on 30 Dec 2025

Filipino operator secures Durban container terminal deal

ICTSI becomes the first terminal operator from SE Asia to manage a South African port

Photo source: ICTSI

International Container Terminal Services Inc. (ICTSI) from the Philippines has won a bid to upgrade and manage the Durban Container Terminal Pier 2 making it the very first terminal port operator from Southeast Asia to win a concession for a South African port. The project, set to last 25 years, will be a joint venture with Transnet Port Terminals, a division of the state-owned South African freight transport company Transnet.

Presently, the container terminal manages 72% of the Port of Durban's cargo and 46% of South Africa's total port traffic. It is positioned to serve as a hub for containerised cargo originating from the Indian Ocean Islands, the Middle East, the Far East, and Australia. Transnet group chief executive Portia Derby said the partnership with ICTSI is part of its programme to bring in international expertise to improve efficiencies at its terminals and take advantage of growth opportunities. In the past decade, Transnet has been adversely affected by issues such as poor management, corruption, underinvestment in infrastructure, labour strikes, and vandalism and theft of its assets. In its The Container Port Performance Index 2022, the World Bank ranked Durban number 341 out of 348 ports. 

With this new transaction, Transnet intends to raise Pier 2's current capacity from 2m to 2.8m twenty-foot containers. This aligns with the larger goal of increasing the Port of Durban's capacity from 3.3m to 11.4m containers. As part of the deal, a new company will be established to oversee Pier 2’s operations, with Transnet retaining majority ownership, holding 50% plus one share. The agreement will span 25 years, after which the terminal will fully revert to Transnet.

ICTSI is among the world's largest port operators. It secured the contract from a list of ten shortlisted bidders. The competition included global players such as China Harbour Engineering Company, Guangzhou Port Co., COSCO Shipping Ports, DP World, and Abu Dhabi Ports. In Africa, ICTSI presently manages ports in Kribi, Cameroon; Port Harcourt, Nigeria; Toamasina, Madagascar; and the Matadi Gateway Terminal in the Democratic Republic of Congo.

The concession coincides with a surge in international interest in the development and management of African ports. Last year, Swiss-based Mediterranean Shipping Company acquired Bolloré Africa Logistics, a French company operating over a dozen container terminals in West and Central Africa, for EUR5.7bn. Chinese companies have also made inroads into Africa's port industry, with China Merchants Port Holdings establishing a presence in Nigeria, Togo, and Djibouti, and China Harbour Engineering Company undertaking dredging and marine engineering projects in nations such as Sudan, Angola and Egypt. Earlier this year, Hong Kong-based Hutchison Ports committed approximately US$700m to two Egyptian port projects, bringing its total investments in the country to US$1.5bn. 

Operators based in the Gulf also recognise the potential in Africa. Dubai's DP World, which operates ports and container terminals in several countries – including Senegal, Egypt, Mozambique, Somaliland, Algeria, and Angola – is currently in negotiations with Tanzania to manage seven berths at the port of Dar es Salaam. In addition, Abu Dhabi’s AD Ports Group signed an agreement last year with the Africa Finance Corporation to invest in ports and logistics infrastructure throughout the continent.


References

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MSC buys Bolloré Group's African ports division for $6.4B’, The Maritime Executive, 21 December 2021

Transnet shortlists respondents from the request for qualifications process for Durban Container Terminal pier 2 (DCT2) and Ngqura Container Terminal (NCT)’, Transnet SOC Limited, 22 August 2022

SA risks economic 'collapse' as Transnet strike hits ports with billions on the line: business’, News24, 10 October 2022

AD Ports Group signs collaboration agreement with Africa Finance Corporation’, AD Ports Group, 07 December 2022

Transnet’s crumbling rail network and debt problems overshadow its profits’, Daily Maverick, 23 December 2022  

Hutchison Ports announces major investment of US$700 million in Egyptian port projects in Sokhna and B100’, Hutchison Ports, 16 March 2023

DP World in talks to expand East African coverage to Tanzania’, BNN Bloomberg, 19 June 2023

Philippine giant wins bid to run Durban container terminal’, News24, 17 July 2023

Africa’s biggest port, Durban to be partially privatised’, Daily Maverick, 17 July 2023

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