Kenya’s Logistics Hubs Take Off as East Africa Pushes for Intra-Regional Trade

Nairobi, Kenya – June 3, 2025
By Maria Kalamatas | The Logistic News
Section: Business
Kenya is rapidly transforming into a key logistics and distribution hub for East Africa, thanks to a bold strategy that links its port, rail, and road networks with inland countries hungry for trade efficiency.
“Intra-African trade is no longer a distant vision—it’s happening,” said Peter Njoroge, director at the Kenya Trade Network Agency. “And logistics is at the center of that momentum.”
At the heart of Kenya’s strategy is Naivasha Inland Container Depot, a dry port project that has become the primary transit point for goods heading to Uganda, Rwanda, and the Democratic Republic of Congo. Paired with the Standard Gauge Railway (SGR), it has helped reduce transit time from Mombasa Port to Kampala by nearly 40%.
Local freight forwarders have also noticed the shift. “We now handle 25% more regional cargo compared to last year,” confirmed Jacqueline Ouma, CEO of Transroute Logistics Ltd. “Kenya is becoming the gateway for East and Central Africa.”
Government initiatives such as the African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA) and regional agreements under the Northern Corridor Transit and Transport Agreement have further accelerated trade flows, removing customs bottlenecks and harmonizing border procedures.
In addition, Kenya is investing heavily in digital customs processing, with the Revenue Authority rolling out a blockchain-based system that allows for cargo tracking in real time. This has improved transparency, cut corruption, and increased throughput at border crossings.
However, challenges remain. The infrastructure gap in neighboring countries, lack of uniform security standards, and occasional political disruptions pose risks to the fluidity of cross-border movement.
Despite that, Kenya’s strategy is gaining attention across the continent. Several West African countries have already dispatched trade delegations to study the Nairobi-Mombasa logistics model.
“If we can scale this regionally,” added Njoroge, “then Africa won’t just be a resource continent—it will become a trading powerhouse on its own terms.”
The post Kenya’s Logistics Hubs Take Off as East Africa Pushes for Intra-Regional Trade appeared first on The Logistic News.
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