Cape Town Port improves ranking in World Bank's Container Port Index

Weekend Argus Reporter|Published

Cape Town Mayor Geordin Hill-Lewis congratulated the Port of Cape Town on its modest improvement in the World Bank’s world port efficiency rankings,

Image: Leon Lestrade/Independent Newspapers

In a significant yet modest uplift, the Port of Cape Town has achieved noteworthy progress in the World Bank's 2024 Container Port Index (CPPI), rising from the bottom of the rankings to 400th out of 403 ports globally. Cape Town Mayor Geordin Hill-Lewis welcomed this leap as a step forward but underscored the urgent necessity for private sector management to build on these gains and drive further efficiencies.

Mayor Hill-Lewis congratulated the port management and the new leadership at Transnet for this encouraging improvement. He remarked, “It is most welcome that Cape Town’s port had the most improved score globally in the latest World Bank index.

However, the port still remains among the bottom five in the world. This shows just how far behind the port has been lagging, underscoring the urgent need for Transnet to bring in private sector management to consolidate these ‘green shoot’ gains.”

Highlighting the economic potential of an efficient port, James Vos, the Mayoral Committee Member for Economic Growth, asserted that optimising port operations could lead to the creation of 20,000 new jobs, an increase of R6 billion in exports, and over R1.6 billion in new tax revenue.

“We should see further rankings improvement due to Transnet’s ongoing R3.4 billion capital investment, including dozens of new cranes this year with critical anti-sway technology. This should enhance the port’s resilience to weather-related disruptions, which have previously diverted goods elsewhere at enormous costs,” Vos added.