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Iraq shortlists 11 firms for Grand Faw port operation, decision in January 2025

A general view shows machinery at the Faw port project site in Al-Faw, southern province of Basra, Iraq November 11, 2024.

Posted on November 13, 2024

Iraq plans to select a winning company in January 2025, with operations set to begin in 2026

Iraq has shortlisted 11 shipping companies to compete for the Grand Faw port operation contract, with a decision on the winners expected in January 2025, Iraq’s director general of the General Company for Ports told Reuters on Tuesday.

The shortlisted companies include China Merchants Port Group Co., Taiwanese container shipping line Evergreen, French shipping group CMA CGM, Mediterranean Shipping Company (MSC), India’s Adani, Philippines-headquartered International Container Terminal Services (ICTSI), China’s Cosco, and United Arab Emirates-based ABM Global Shipping LLC.

Iraq plans to select a winning company in January 2025, with operations set to begin in 2026, said Farhan al-Fartousi.

South Korea’s Daewoo Engineering & Construction completed the construction of five docks, which were handed over to Iraqi port authorities on Thursday during an inauguration attended by Iraqi Prime Minister Mohammed Shia al-Sudani.

Faw port is expected to operate in maximum capacity to receive 3.5 million containers in 2028, he added.

The Grand Faw port is part of several projects aimed at creating a shorter transportation corridor between the Middle East and Europe, bypassing the Suez Canal.

Iraq launched a $17 billion project in 2023 to link the major commodities port on its southern coast by rail and roads to the border with Turkey, aiming to transform the country’s economy after decades of war and crisis.

“The Grand Faw port will be a pivotal hub for transforming global transport trade towards Europe via Turkey,” said Fartousi.

The Development Road seeks to connect the Grand Faw Port in Iraq’s oil-rich south to Turkey, turning the country into a transit hub by shortening travel time between Asia and Europe, in a bid to rival the Suez Canal.

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