Renco says it has invested more than €155 million in Mozambique across energy, logistics, civil construction and urban infrastructure, including the Pemba Bay Terminal and a new Nacala office. For WFL's audience, the useful signal is that private logistics and port infrastructure around Cabo Delgado is still being positioned for gas-linked demand.
Read more →Mozambique LNG and cabotage shipping news
Mozambique LNG, Cabo Delgado infrastructure, and logistics news curated for procurement and project teams working in northern Mozambique.
Last updated: 12 May 2026 / 30 stories
President Daniel Chapo said Mozambique wants to develop refineries in Maputo and Beira and reinforce storage infrastructure, including around Quelimane, after recent fuel shortages and price increases. Freight planners should read this as confirmation that fuel resilience is now a strategic logistics issue, not a temporary road-transport inconvenience.
Read more →The Government says it may use subsidies or compensation for public transport operators while improving strategic fuel stocks, storage capacity and supplier diversification. For project logistics, this reinforces the need to price road legs carefully and protect recurring cargo from fuel-driven disruption.
Read more →ADF reports that Rwanda has tied the future of its Cabo Delgado deployment to sustained funding, with analysts warning that any withdrawal could create a security vacuum. For Afungi-facing supply chains, the practical takeaway is to keep route, escort and contingency planning active even as LNG work ramps up.
Read more →LNG Prime reports that TotalEnergies CEO Patrick Pouyanné said Mozambique LNG is 42% complete and has more than 6,000 people working in Cabo Delgado. The project signal remains positive for contractors, but rising activity also increases pressure on reliable cabotage, reefer and planned resupply capacity.
Read more →FEMATRO says diesel shortages have been disrupting public transport for weeks, with operators reporting queues, rationing and improvised fuel storage to keep vehicles running. For project freight, the message is clear: road legs remain exposed to fuel availability and fare pressure.
Read more →Patrick Pouyanné said TotalEnergies has more than 6,000 workers back on the Mozambique LNG site, with the US$20 billion project 42% complete and first LNG targeted for 2029. For WFL's audience, it is a concrete signal that contractor mobilisation and cargo demand around Afungi continue to build.
Read more →Mozambique and the United States signed a US$537.5 million MCC memorandum focused on connectivity, rural transport and agriculture, including the Licungo bridge and upgrades tied to the Nacala Corridor. The package matters for logistics planners because it targets lower transport costs and better freight flow in strategic northern and central routes.
Read more →LAM says domestic and regional flights have been rescheduled because of technical, operational and maintenance constraints, with normalisation targeted by 5 May. That is a practical warning for crews, expediters and urgent small-lot cargo that depend on reliable air connections.
Read more →President Daniel Chapo said the Ethiopia visit produced six cooperation instruments and drew interest from Ethiopian companies in sectors including civil aviation, industry and technology. For WFL's audience, that points to deeper regional trade links and potential new partnerships around Mozambique's project economy.
Read more →Millennium bim and APIEX signed an MoU to coordinate investor support, business promotion and financing solutions across Mozambique's priority sectors. For procurement and project teams, it is a useful signal that the country is trying to reduce friction for new investors entering and scaling strategic projects.
Read more →Nacala Logistics donated about 50 tons of medical and surgical supplies to Nampula, reinforcing the operator's presence across the Nacala Corridor. The immediate cargo impact is limited, but the story keeps attention on a northern rail and port network that matters for long-range supply planning.
Read more →IATA says Mozambique is among African countries with blocked airline funds, part of roughly US$774 million in frozen revenues across the region. For logistics teams, that raises the risk of weaker airline confidence, fewer route additions and slower recovery in air connectivity.
Read more →President Daniel Chapo said Mozambique is negotiating with Ethiopian Airlines to add two weekly Beira flights and open a direct international route to Nacala, potentially by July. If it happens, northern Mozambique gains better access for project travel, supplier visits and time-sensitive cargo coordination.
Read more →Beira Port received a second tanker in 48 hours, adding 20 million litres of diesel for central Mozambique after 18 million litres of petrol was discharged earlier in the week. For freight planners, the key signal is that marine fuel imports are still moving, but FX constraints and domestic distribution bottlenecks are still pressuring inland supply.
Read more →The Mozambique LNG project signed recovery agreements worth about 145.5 million meticais with three civil society groups to support roughly 180,000 people hit by floods in Gaza, Maputo and Inhambane. It shows TotalEnergies is still expanding its on-the-ground operating footprint and local stakeholder engagement, which matters for contractors tracking project momentum and community risk.
Read more →ARENE said unofficial fuel price information circulating in the market does not count as formal guidance and stressed that monthly pricing still follows the regulator's approval process. That matters for procurement teams because cost assumptions on road haulage, last-mile delivery and backup generation should stay flexible until official prices are published.
Read more →Transport and Logistics Minister João Matlombe said Mozambique plans to invest US$2.6 billion to rehabilitate and build more than 3,000 kilometres of roads by 2031, including 951 kilometres across Niassa, Cabo Delgado and Nampula. If execution holds, the programme should improve corridor resilience, cut inland logistics costs and strengthen access into northern project zones.
Read more →Lusa reported that fuel shortages have pushed drivers, minibus operators and commuters in Maputo into long queues, service interruptions and reduced daily mobility. The practical takeaway for supply chains is simple: road delivery reliability is still under pressure, and any inland leg that depends on diesel availability needs extra buffer time.
Read more →At least four people were killed in Mitope village in Mocimboa da Praia district after an attack that also displaced residents and hit small local shops. For Afungi-facing contractors, it is a reminder that security risk in Cabo Delgado still needs active monitoring because it can quickly affect workforce movement, routing and site access assumptions.
Read more →Authorities said LAM has enough Jet A1 for the next 30 days and is not planning to cut domestic routes. Port fuel unloading is continuing, which matters for contractors watching wider transport continuity and fuel availability.
Read more →President Daniel Chapo used his China visit to push for support on the N1 and the Mapai dam, arguing for structural solutions to road damage and flood control. Both projects matter for freight planning because the N1 remains the country's main north-south corridor and climate damage keeps affecting reliability.
Read more →President Chapo toured Chinese manufacturing and logistics facilities and signalled interest in technology transfer for roads, bridges, ports and processing capacity. The bigger takeaway for suppliers is that Mozambique is still actively seeking industrial investment that could widen project activity and cargo demand.
Read more →LAM says it has enough Jet A1 for the next 30 days and is not planning to cut domestic routes or stops. Port authorities also reported fresh fuel volumes moving through Matola and Beira, which helps calm immediate concerns around wider transport continuity and fuel availability.
Read more →Cabo Delgado will host an international conference in Pemba in June focused on industrialisation, agribusiness and tourism under the province's Territorial Strategy 2025 to 2034. For project suppliers, it signals that provincial authorities want to widen the economic base around energy activity and attract new investors despite ongoing security and climate pressures.
Read more →The African Development Bank brought together 104 port statisticians and maritime stakeholders to validate data for the African Ports Connectivity Portal Project and a new African Port Index. The initiative aims to standardise port KPIs across the continent, which should improve benchmarking, investment planning and evidence based decisions for regional cargo corridors.
Read more →Maputo is urging businesses and motorists to conserve fuel and prepare for a possible price adjustment in May as Middle East volatility hits supply planning. The move shows fuel pressure is still feeding into operating decisions, delivery timing and transport cost risk across Mozambique.
Read more →The final two 3,300 horsepower locomotives under a ten-engine export contract have reached Mozambique, completing the order for Cape Gauge operations. More rail capacity supports inland freight resilience and shows ongoing investment in corridor equipment.
Read more →Reuters reported that one of the refined-product tankers clearing Hormuz over the weekend is bound for Mozambique. For importers and project planners, it is a practical signal that fuel cargoes are still moving despite regional disruption.
Read more →CFM says floods on the Limpopo Line have kept about 130 trains off the network, causing roughly US$12 million in losses and delaying a reopening until 1 May. The line is important for minerals, fuel, cereals and containerised cargo moving between Zimbabwe and Maputo, so the disruption still matters for corridor reliability.
Read more →Planning cargo to Afungi?
Weekly sailings, reefer-capable, with last-mile camp delivery.
