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Tanger Med port in Morocco prepares to increase traffic after Gulf War

Tanger Med in Morocco, Africa's biggest container port, is planning to increase calls from ships due to escalating tensions around the Middle East, said the port's managing director on Monday.

Container carriers such as Hapag-Lloyd, Maersk and CMA CGM have announced this month that they will reroute vessels around Cape of Good Hope.

Idriss Aarabi, the managing director of Tanger Med told me by email that rerouting would increase transit time from 10 to 14 extra days for vessels diverted via Cape of Good Hope in order to reach Tanger Med.

Aarabi stated that the port of Tanger Med in northern Morocco, on the Strait of Gibraltar is focused on "capacity-management and the prevention of congestion."

He said that the full impact of cargo flows would not be visible until April 2026. At this point, no cancellations had been reported.

Since late 2023 when Houthi attacks against Red Sea shipping began, ships have avoided the Suez Canal as well as the Bab el-Mandeb Strait. U.S., Israeli and other strikes against Iran and the closing of the Strait of Hormuz has reinforced this?shift. This is leading to expectations that Africa's Bunkering Sector will benefit from the prolonged instability.

Aarabi stated that higher fuel costs have added pressure to freight rates because of longer voyages via Cape Good Hope.

He said that carriers have implemented war-risk and emergency conflict surcharges between $1,500 to $3,300 for standard containers, with fees as high as $4,000 if the equipment is specialised.

Tanger Med?outperformed Mediterranean competitors with 11.1 millions?containers in 2025. This is an 8.4% increase from a year ago. It has route connections to over 180 ports around the world. (Reporting and editing by Susan Fenton; Ahmed El Jechtimi)

(source: Reuters)