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LMC, TASHICO eye partnership to capture more Congolese freight via Dar es Salaam corridor

LMC, TASHICO eye partnership to capture more Congolese freight via Dar es Salaam corridor

DR Congo’s state-owned shipping line, Lignes maritimes congolaises (LMC), is seeking to strengthen its presence on the Dar es Salaam corridor, one of the main gateways for Congolese foreign trade via the Indian Ocean.

Lambert Mende, chairman of the board of the Congolese public shipping company, met a delegation from Tanzania Shipping Company Limited (TASHICO) in Kinshasa on May 4, 2026.

According to LMC, talks focused on building a strategic partnership to improve logistics links between Kinshasa and Dar es Salaam. The two companies are considering signing a memorandum of understanding in the near term. They have already appointed representatives to oversee joint projects once the agreement is formalized.

LMC said the initiative aims to develop an integrated logistics offering between the Democratic Republic of Congo and Tanzania. The partnership is designed to attract cargo moving through eastern and southern DRC, where a significant share of mineral exports already passes through Tanzanian ports, particularly Dar es Salaam.

The partners also aim to position the DRC and Tanzania as a logistics bridge between Africa’s Atlantic and Indian Ocean coastlines. Tanzania’s ambassador to the DRC, Saidi Juma Mchana, said the countries’ complementary trade routes could open access to a regional market of more than 160 million consumers and ease the movement of goods across the subregion.

The partnership is part of LMC’s 2023-2027 revival plan, which aims to reposition the company as a maritime and multimodal transport operator for Congolese foreign trade. The plan includes expanding operations along corridors where LMC currently has a limited presence, including the Dar es Salaam corridor, as well as developing storage capacity and a broader maritime and multimodal transport offering.

The goal is economic: to secure a larger share of Congolese freight, which is still overwhelmingly carried by foreign shipping companies. Under its revival plan, LMC aims to increase its share of the country’s seaborne trade from 0.3% in 2021 to 2% by 2027, raising volumes carried from 45,000 metric tons to about 395,000 metric tons.

Ronsard Luabeya

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