Ethiopia opens freight forwarding sector to foreign investors

The Ethiopian government has fully liberalized the freight forwarding sector, allowing foreign investors to operate without local partners for the first time. The decision, approved by the Ethiopian Investment Board, takes immediate effect and reverses a 2020 regulation. Industry experts have expressed mixed views on its potential impact.

The move overturns Investment Regulation No. 474/2020, which had limited foreign shareholding to 49 percent in joint ventures. According to the Ethiopian Investment Commission, the prior rules had not drawn sufficient new investment.

Worku Lemma, Director of the National Logistics Transformation Office, said the change will bring knowledge, technology and resources to reduce costs and delays. He noted that logistics weaknesses have fueled inflation and hurt export competitiveness.

Dawit Woubeshet, CEO of Cosmos and president of the Ethiopian Freight Forwarders and Shipping Agents Association, said the market can accommodate only a limited number of large operators. An anonymous veteran expert added that foreign interest may stay low and that some local firms had already formed informal partnerships with international players.

관련 기사

Logistics costs in Ethiopia account for 25-30% of commodity prices, making them up to 60% higher than in neighboring countries. The lack of direct sea access, infrastructure challenges, and reliance on the Port of Djibouti drive these elevated expenses. The government has introduced incentives for investors and plans to modernize the system to address the issue.

AI에 의해 보고됨

Ethiopia's Transport and Logistics Ministry has ordered transport tariffs to be cut solely on a specified basis. The directive addresses disruptions from fuel price hikes caused by the Middle East conflict. All transport operators must implement it strictly from today.

The fourth Invest in Ethiopia 2026 forum, held over two days in Addis Ababa, concluded today. It featured 13 investment opportunities worth 1 billion dollars. Major commitments were sealed in manufacturing, agriculture, energy, mining and other sectors.

AI에 의해 보고됨

Ethiopia has saved billions of dollars through its homegrown economic policy in the manufacturing sector. In just the past nine months, domestic production substituted imports worth 4.85 billion dollars, while exports reached 433 million dollars. Data from the Ministry of Industry confirms these gains.

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