The operator launched the new route carrying fertilizer, the first cargo on a service the government frames as a way to place logistics at the service of the real economy. Over the coming days, the Port of Beira in Sofala will begin receiving vessels with mixed goods, part of a cabotage revival programme that began in April last year.
CIVITAS has assigned a vessel that calls at Nacala, Pemba and Afungi, with a fixed stop at Beira, while calls at Inhambane remain under study. The link was first tested in January, when reconnaissance voyages carried humanitarian cargo to Sofala and to Chongoene, in Gaza province.
One of the heaviest burdens on the Mozambican economy is the price of moving inputs from the port to the interior. By several estimates, that inland leg costs more than shipping the same product from Asia to the port in the first place. Long-haul road transport alone can account for 30 to 40 percent of the final price of agricultural goods.
By lifting cargo off the highway and onto the water, the CIVITAS route removes hundreds of kilometres of road, tolls and truck wear. The aim is for the saving to travel beyond the quay and reach the price of the fertilizer sack a farmer pays in the village. With 2,700 kilometres of coastline and working ports from north to south, the country holds assets that sat underused for years.
The approach echoes Indonesia and the Philippines, which knit their internal markets together only once cargo moved from the road onto regular coastal routes. According to the Ministry of Transport and Logistics, the service links three of the country’s most structured ports, and does so with real cargo on board rather than declarations alone. The Port of Chongoene, in Gaza, stays outside the route for now, having been built as a mining terminal without facilities for general cargo.
To give the Mozambique cabotage programme predictability, the government has cut ship berthing fees by half and navigation-aid fees by three-quarters. It has also created a special registry for cabotage vessels and granted them priority on entry, departure and cargo handling. Data from UNCTAD indicate that coastal routes running at least two to three calls a month can lower logistics costs by 12 to 18 percent within two years.
If frequency holds, CIVITAS plans to widen the Mozambique cabotage offer to cement, rice and construction materials, and to bring in ports such as Quelimane and Pemba. Cheaper, steadier transport would let small producers in Nampula sell into Sofala without losing margin, while traders in Manica could plan stock without depending on the state of the EN6.
The Nacala–Beira–Maputo run is being presented as a successful proof of concept on its first lap. Should frequency continue, customs steps grow simpler and more ships join, the route could mark a turning point in the cost of producing and living in the country. Its intended impact is practical: policy that shows up in price, in time and in the movement of the national economy.
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