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Minister: Morocco will open two deepwater ports in 2026 and 2020

Nizar Baraka, the Equipment and Water Minister, said that Morocco would open a deepwater Mediterranean port in 2019 and an Atlantic port in 2028. The North African nation is aiming to duplicate the success of Africa’s largest port, Tanger Med.

Baraka said in an interview that the Nador West Med project, currently under construction in the Mediterranean, will be operational by the second half 2026.

He said that the industrial zone will cover 800 hectares and be expanded to 5000, which is more than Tanger Med.

The port will host Morocco's first liquefied gas terminal - a floating gas storage and regasification (FSRU) unit - connected by a pipe to industrial hubs to the northwest. Morocco is pushing investments in renewable energy and natural gas to reduce its dependence on coal.

Morocco is also building a port worth $1 billion in Dakhla on the Atlantic Coast, which is in the disputed Western Sahara.

Baraka stated that the facility would be surrounded with 1,600 hectares of industrial land and 5,200 acres of farmland that will be irrigated using desalinated drinking water.

Baraka stated that the port would be completed in 2028, and it will be the deepest port in Morocco at 23 meters. He said that such depth would be ideal for heavy industries that process raw materials from Sahel-based countries.

Officials have promoted Dakhla to landlocked Sahel countries as a gateway to global trade.

Baraka stated that both Nador and Dakhla will have quays for exporting green hydrogen as soon as production begins.

Nador and Dakhla will be Morocco's third- and fourth-deepwater ports, after Tanger Med, a port for energy, bulk cargo, and phosphate exports on the Atlantic.

Official figures indicate that by 2024, the industrial zones around Tanger Med will host 1,400 companies employing 130,000 workers in sectors such as automotive, aeronautics and textiles.

Baraka stated that Morocco also considers building a port at Tan-Tan, on the Atlantic, in partnership with green hydrogen investors. Baraka stated that "we are conducting studies in order to determine the size of the port." (Reporting and editing by Aiden Lewis; Ahmed Eljechtimi)

(source: Reuters)