“Over
the last few years, we’ve increasingly seen the importance of up
scaling our facilities in the various regions within the continent,”
comments Oliver Facey, Vice-President - Operations for DHL Express
Sub-Saharan Africa. “As multinationals turn to Africa, and as
smaller African enterprises look to trade cross-border, regions like
West Africa need increased infrastructure and capacity to cope with
the rising demand for the transportation of goods across these
markets.”
The
express operator, which already boasts a large hub and gateway in
Lagos, Nigeria, opened the facility in early November, to handle
transit volumes. The facility will enable the handling of material
destined for Senegal and transit material through Dakar to help with
the improvement of the service quality delivered to a market with
ever increasing activity, consistently under time pressure.
“We
have expanded our operation at Dakar as a natural location for
feeding in traffic to West Africa,” says Facey. “The Dakar
facility receives a new return flight from Brussels and it will be
serviced once a week by a Boeing 757 200 SF with a capacity of over
25 tons.”
The
two ATR 72’s, each with a capacity of 7 tonnes, will connect
countries including Senegal, Guinea, Sierra Leone, Liberia, Cote
d’Ivoire, Mali and Mauritania. These aircraft are ideal since they
have large cargo doors and provide a fully palletized loading
capability, making them more efficient for handling.
He
continues, “These investments mean that we can offer increased
dedicated capacity in West Africa and generally have less dependency
on limited commercial airlines uplift for volumes along the west
coast of Africa. This increased capacity supports both DHL’s
express and freight products, especially perishable goods, which has
always been one of the easier ways for African businesses to gain
access to European markets and now DHL can better support players in
this market.”
No comments:
Post a Comment