MARITIME TRADE & SHIPPING
Djibouti Unveils Largest Shipyard in East Africa, Strengthening Its Maritime Dominance
Djibouti Unveils Largest Shipyard in East Africa, Strengthening Its Maritime Dominance
By Raymond Gold | Waterways News
Djibouti has taken a bold step in cementing its status as Africa’s foremost maritime hub, officially inaugurating the Djibouti Ship Repair Yard (DSRY) — now the largest ship repair facility in both the Red Sea and East Africa — in a development that is already drawing attention across the continent’s maritime community.
The facility, developed through a strategic partnership with the Dutch shipbuilding giant, Damen Shipyards Group, was formally opened by President Ismaïl Omar Guelleh and financed by Invest International of the Netherlands at a cost of €107.5 million (approximately $116.5 million). The project, a decade in the making, marks a defining moment not only for Djibouti but for the broader African maritime landscape.
Speaking at the inauguration ceremony, President Guelleh underscored the significance of the project to the nation’s long-term ambitions. “The DSRY project has always been a national priority, given Djibouti’s strategic location at the entrance to the Bab el-Mandeb, one of the world’s busiest maritime routes,” he said.
The Bab el-Mandeb strait, which links the Red Sea to the Gulf of Aden, serves as a critical artery for global trade, channeling cargo between Europe, Asia, and the Middle East. It is against this backdrop that the new yard’s strategic importance becomes immediately apparent.
A Facility Built for Scale
The DSRY is no modest undertaking. Positioned on 80 hectares with over 800 metres of berth, the facility is equipped with a floating dock measuring 217 metres in length and 43 metres in width, with a lifting capacity of 20,100 tonnes — infrastructure capable of accommodating a wide range of vessel types. The yard is designed to deliver both preventive and corrective maintenance services, supported by a combination of international expertise and local talent.
Work at the yard did not wait for the official inauguration to begin. As far back as October 15, 2025, the first large vessel had already entered for dry-docking — the Africa Sun, a 13,719 dwt Djibouti-flagged containership operating along Red Sea and Middle Eastern routes, which docked for a month of repairs.
Aboubaker Omar Hadi, Chairman of the Djibouti Ports and Free Zones Authority, said the facility aligns squarely with Djibouti’s 2035 vision, reinforcing the country’s ambition to become the preeminent maritime services centre on the continent. Minister of Infrastructure and Equipment Hassan Houmed Ibrahim went further, describing the yard as “a strategic national asset that enhances port competitiveness, supports the blue economy, and strengthens Djibouti’s regional position.”
Arnout Damen, President of Damen Shipyards, reaffirmed his company’s commitment to the yard’s long-term operational success, signalling that this is more than a construction handover — it is an ongoing partnership.
Beyond the infrastructure itself, the DSRY is projected to create approximately 350 direct jobs and around 1,400 indirect positions, while nurturing a generation of skilled young professionals in advanced technical maritime fields.
A Strategic Move in a Competitive Region
Djibouti’s investment comes at a particularly charged moment in regional maritime politics. The Horn of Africa is witnessing intensifying competition over port access and control, with the United Arab Emirates actively expanding its footprint through investments and long-term port agreements across the region. Djibouti and the UAE have themselves been locked in prolonged legal disputes over port concession arrangements — a reminder of how high the stakes are in this arena.
For years, East Africa and the broader African continent have depended heavily on overseas facilities in the Middle East, Europe, or Asia for major vessel repairs, draining foreign exchange and adding logistical burden to ship operators. The DSRY fundamentally disrupts that pattern, offering a world-class alternative on African soil.
As maritime analysts have noted, the development reflects a wider continental trend: Africa is no longer content to serve merely as a transit corridor for global shipping. From Southern Africa to West Africa, investments in repair capacity are signalling an era of vertical integration — where ports, logistics, and ship maintenance ecosystems are being developed together. Djibouti’s DSRY is perhaps the most dramatic expression of that ambition yet.
Nigeria Watch
As Djibouti Opens Africa’s Largest Shipyard, Nigeria’s Floating Dock Remains a Cautionary Tale
The inauguration of Djibouti’s Djibouti Ship Repair Yard serves as both an inspiration and a sobering mirror for Nigeria — Africa’s most populous nation and, by rights, one of its most strategically positioned maritime players.
Nigeria is not without assets in this space. Nigerdock, located at the Snake Island Integrated Free Zone in Lagos, remains the largest shipyard facility in West Africa, boasting a 25,000 DWT graving dock, floating dock facilities, and multipurpose workshops that have serviced over 600 vessels in its more than three-decade history. The yard offers ship repair, maintenance, refurbishment, and offshore fabrication services, and has long been a point of pride for the country’s maritime sector.
Yet even as Djibouti cuts the ribbon on a $116.5 million state-of-the-art facility, Nigeria continues to grapple with the ghost of what should have been a transformative asset. A floating dry dock, procured at a cost of approximately N50 billion in public funds — now worth considerably more given naira depreciation — arrived in Nigeria as far back as 2018 and reportedly remained idle for years, caught in a web of bureaucratic bottlenecks and indecision over where to site it. Industry stakeholders have repeatedly described the situation as emblematic of a wider malaise afflicting Nigeria’s maritime infrastructure development.
Watchers of Nigeria’s maritime sector are not blind to the potential. With an estimated 5,000 ship calls annually at its ports, hundreds of active coastal vessels, and a significant fishing fleet, the commercial case for a functional, world-class ship repair ecosystem in Nigeria is overwhelming. Industry estimates have suggested the country could save upwards of N350 billion annually — and earn millions more in foreign exchange — by reducing its dependence on overseas dry-docking, which can cost operators over $1 million per tow before a single repair is carried out.
The question, as Djibouti’s example makes plain, is not whether Nigeria has the need or the resources. It is whether the country can muster the institutional will to transform that need into reality — before other nations on the continent permanently capture the market that should, by geography and volume, belong to Nigeria.
Raymond Gold is Co-publisher and Research reporter for Waterways News. For maritime industry updates, visit www.waterwaysnews.ng