AD Ports Group explores Matadi Port multipurpose terminal project in DR Congo

AD Ports Group has signed Heads of Terms with the Democratic Republic of the Congo’s Ministry of Transport, Communications, and Opening Up and the National Transport Office (ONATRA SA) to explore the development and operation of a multipurpose terminal at Matadi Port. The agreement is framed as a preliminary step toward improving capacity and operational efficiency and supporting import and export flows through one of the country’s key maritime gateways.
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Matadi terminal move in one read
AD Ports Group announced a Heads of Terms with the Democratic Republic of the Congo’s Ministry of Transport, Communications, and Opening Up and the National Transport Office (ONATRA SA) to explore the development and operation of a multipurpose terminal at Matadi Port.
- Document stage is an exploration framework, not a finalized concession announcement.
- Stated objectives include improving operational efficiency and capacity and supporting streamlined import and export flows.
- Near-term signals to watch are scope definition, funding confirmation, operating rights, and a delivery timeline.
| Reader shortcut | Signed | Operational goalpost | Execution checkpoints | Industry Impact |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Not a concession yet |
Heads of Terms to explore development and operation of a multipurpose terminal at Matadi Port.
A preliminary framework with the DRC Ministry and ONATRA SA.
|
Stated focus is improving capacity and operational efficiency, and supporting smoother import and export flows. | Watch for the shift from “explore” to funded scope, timeline, and contracting path. | Carriers, forwarders, and shippers that are most exposed to Matadi dwell time and berth access. |
| Counterparty clarity | Agreement framework involves ONATRA SA (National Transport Office) and the DRC Ministry of Transport, Communications, and Opening Up. | A single operator plan can tighten accountability for yard discipline, gate processes, and vessel working windows. | Any published terminal operating model, tariff approach, and service level targets. | Cargo owners focused on predictability, plus agents managing arrival sequencing and documentation timing. |
| Multipurpose matters | “Multipurpose” points to mixed cargo handling rather than a single dedicated commodity lane. | The biggest near-term swing variable is whether the program reduces congestion risk at a constrained gateway. | Equipment plan, berth and yard configuration choices, and any digitization or appointment systems. | Breakbulk and general cargo users, then containerized cargo if included in the operating design. |
| Timeline signal |
The HoT was announced on 3 February 2026, signed in Abu Dhabi by senior government and AD Ports leadership.
Formal signing suggests the project is being positioned at state level.
|
Announcements do not change port performance alone, execution does. | Next documents that specify scope, capex commitments, phased delivery, and operating rights. | Insurers, compliance teams, and chartering desks tracking schedule reliability and port-cost variability. |
| Africa footprint context | AD Ports notes existing ports, logistics, and maritime investments across several African countries. | A regional operator playbook can speed up ramp if governance and procurement are aligned locally. | Evidence of staffing, local partnerships, and early contractor mobilization. | Operators comparing Matadi performance and cost against alternate routing and discharge options. |
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