Is Egypt’s emergency Gulf workaround no longer a one-off? While shipping through the Strait of Hormuz was still running at a fraction of normal levels in late April, a functioning Europe-Egypt-GCC corridor had already been established, with trailers arriving at Damietta, moving overland to Safaga, and then crossing by ferry to Saudi Arabia before continuing by road into Gulf markets.
The big question now is whether this route will endure once the security shock subsides. Current evidence suggests it will, but with a caveat. Rather than becoming the new default trade lane, it is more likely to be formalized as a strategic backup — a route which shippers, ports, and Gulf investors may want to preserve as ins. against potential future closures of the Hormuz chokepoint.
Why this matters: Egypt can position the route as an alternative layer of connectivity within its regional risk management system. With Suez Canal revenues under pressure during disruptions, the ability to capture even a small share of rerouted, time sensitive-cargo — and anchor it through ports and inland transport — would provide a welcome revenue stream.
The pitch
It’s fast: “Compared to traditional sea freight options, transit times via conventional routes remain longer,” Commercial Director at Pan Marine Ghada Samy tells EnterpriseAM. “Initially, customers were hesitant to adopt this model. However, due to urgency in their shipments, several chose to trial the solution,” Samy says.
By the numbers: Official figures put capacity on the Europe-Egypt leg at up to 420 trailers a week, while Pan Marine’s Safaga-Neom leg runs four fixed weekly sailings — each capable of carrying up to 130 trucks. This scale is significant for those shipping perishables, FMCG, industrial parts, and urgent cargo.
It’s live: “We successfully executed multiple shipments from different European origins, covering both dry and reefer cargo to GCC destinations which started to give more confidence to other customers,” Samy notes. Neom said last month that the full Europe-Egypt-Neom-GCC pathway was active and already being used by importers from European markets.
It’s reliable: “As a result, customers are increasingly relying on this model. It is helping them reduce safety stock levels and manage cashflow more efficiently,” Samy adds, noting that the 45-ft trailers provide higher cargo capacity compared to standard 40-ft containers, enabling more volume to be moved in less time.
It's a two way street: “Pan Marine also recently launched export flows from GCC to the EU, and supported shipments to North Africa via our hub in Damietta,” Samy highlights.
And it makes sense in the longer term — with a few caveats: “Under normal conditions, this route can make commercial sense when leveraging higher capacity of equipment, door-to-door service, and optimized transit time. As freight rates normalize, the cost gap narrows, making this corridor increasingly competitive,” Samy explains.
Interest exists for a more permanent route
“There is currently an ongoing discussion with customers to maintain this corridor beyond current disruption,” Samy tells us. “The focus is on securing standby or flexible capacity in Egypt as part of longer-term resilience planning rather than relying on it only at times of crisis,” she says, noting that “a wider customer base is now incorporating this route into their regular supply chain strategies.”
Capital has long been deployed around the idea that Egyptian nodes matter. AD Ports says it has invested some USD 469 mn in Egypt since 2022. Since then, it has secured IFC-backed financing for the Noatum Ports Safaga Terminal (which will come online by 3Q this year), signed an MoU for a logistics hub at Alexandria Port, and secured a 50-year renewable usufruct for the Kezad East Port Said industrial and logistics zone with the SCZone. The group also acquired stakes in Alexandria Container and CargoHandling Company, logistics firms TCI and Transmar, and maritime service provider Safina.
But the route has its drawbacks
Commercially, the route looks strongest in conditions where speed commands a premium. In peacetime, it still remains relevant for selected time-sensitive cargo.
But for low-margin, bulky, or non-urgent trade, the extra truck legs and hand-offs make the commercial case much thinner.
Inland execution is the make-or-break factor: The corridor’s performance will depend on trucking capacity, border discipline, and customs choreography. “Trucking availability remains a key pressure point, particularly given the combined demand from domestic Egyptian cargo and transit flows,” Samy notes.
That is where the regional warning lights flash: As land bridge routes took on more cargo, demand for trucking capacity surged well beyond available supply, with rates on some Gulf corridors quadrupling above pre-disruption levels, while fuel costs and fleet constraints added further pressure.
The inland layer needs depth, whether that be ensured trucking capacity, more drivers, stable fuel access, or tighter border performance. “High cargo volumes have intermittently led to congestion at ports and border crossings, impacting overall fluidity,” Samy says.
“At the beginning, ACI requirements were a major bottleneck; however, this was quickly addressed,” Samy added. The March customs notice exempted indirect transit shipments for Gulf destinations from ACI pre-registration for three months, granting them priority processing — a serious attempt to smooth out the Egyptian leg.
The three-month emergency exemption for transit cargo did the heavy lifting in making the corridor viable. If that expires without new exemptions to make the route more attractive, a big part of the route's competitiveness goes with it.
Our take
The underlying model is already changing: We are moving from an era of narrow optimization to an era of strategic redundancy, where resilient efficiency — not minimal cost — defines a well‑designed network. When the same lanes and chokepoints are repeatedly disrupted, building supply chains around a single “most efficient” route becomes a concentration of risk.
The future isn’t one dominant route — it’s a portfolio of corridors. Power in global trade is shifting from control of a single chokepoint to managing multiple alternatives when it fails.
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