Syllabus of the Program - Infrastructures in Africa.
African Infrastructure Knowledge Programme
Infrastructure Consortium for Africa
Trends in African Infrastructure Investment
Analysis of infrastructure in Africa
Infrastructure and African economic growth
Infrastructure and poverty reduction
Institutional framework for infrastructure
Urbanization and delivery of infrastructure services
Regional Integration and infrastructures
Growth of the Information and communication technologies
Energy
Syllabus of the Program - Programme for Infrastructure Development in Africa (PIDA).
Introduction to the Programme for Infrastructure Development in Africa
Key sectors of the Programme for Infrastructure Development in Africa
PIDA - energy
PIDA - transport
PIDA - information and communication technologies
PIDA - Transboundary Water Resources
PIDA's outcomes: development through the regional integration
Costs and investments of the Programme for Infrastructure Development in Africa
Syllabus of the Program - Maritime Transport in Africa.
Introduction to the Maritime Transport in Africa
The main African maritime ports
Revised African Maritime Transport Charter
Durban Resolution on Maritime Safety, Maritime Security and Protection of the Marine Environment in Africa
Syllabus of the Program - Ports of Southern Africa
The main ports of Southern Africa
South Africa: Port of Durban
Other ports of South Africa: Richards Bay East London, Ngqura, Port Elizabeth, Mossel Bay, The Cape, Saldanha
Namibia: Port of Walvis Bay
Objectives of the Program “Ports of Southern Africa”:
To know the main ports of Southern Africa
To analyze the main characteristics of the ports of Southern Africa
Port of Durban (South Africa).
Introduction to the ports of South Africa
Port Authority of South Africa (Transnet)
Port of Durban
Access to the landlocked Southern African Countries: Botswana, Lesotho,
Eswatini, Zambia, and Zimbabwe
Other South African ports: East London, The Cape, Mossel Bay, Ngqura, Port Elizabeth, Saldanha, and Richards Bay
Port of Walvis Bay (Namibia).
Introduction to the Namibian ports
Port of Walvis Bay
Gateway to Angola, Botswana, the DR Congo, South Africa, Zambia. And Zimbabwe
Port of Lüderitz
Namibian corridors: Walvis Bay, Trans-Orange, Trans-Kalahari, Trans-Caprivi, and Trans-Cunene
Syllabus of the Program - Ports of East Africa
The main ports of East Africa
Port of Djibouti
Egypt: Port-Said and Port of Alexandria.
Suez Canal
Kenya: Port of Mombasa - the largest Port of the region
Madagascar: ports of Madagascar (Toamasina)
Mozambique: ports of Beira, Nacala and Maputo
Sudan: Port Soudan
Tanzania: Port of Dar es-Salaam
Objectives of the Program “Ports of East Africa”:
To know the main ports of East Africa
To analyze the main characteristics of the ports of East Africa
Ports of Djibouti
Introduction to the Port of Djibouti
Main characteristics of the Port of Djibouti
Access to the Ethiopian Market
Other ports of Djibouti: Port of Goubet and Port of Tadjourah
Egyptian ports:
Maritime transport in Egypt
Port Said
Port of Alexandria
Port of Dekheila
Suez Canal (Egypt)
Introduction to the Suez Canal
Authority of the Suez Canal
Strategic importance of the canal
New Suez Canal
Port of Mombasa (Kenya)
Introduction to the Port of Mombasa (Kenya): the largest East African port
Gateway to Burundi, the DR Congo, Ethiopia, Rwanda, Sudan, South Sudan, Somalia, and Tanzania
Other ports of Kenya: Kiunga, Lamu, Malindi..
Ports of Madagascar
Introduction to the ports of Madagascar
Port of Toamasina
Port of Ehoala
Port of Tamatave
Ports of Mozambique
Introduction to the ports of Mozambique
Port of Maputo
Port of Beira
Port of Nacala
Project of the Nacala road corridor
Port Sudan
Introduction to Port Sudan
Main characteristics of Port Sudan
Ports of Bashayr 1 and Bashayr 2
Other ports of Sudan: Port of Prince Osman Digna, Port of Oseif, Wadi Halfa (Riverport)
Port of Dar es-Salaam (Tanzania).
Introduction to the Port of Dar es-Salaam (Tanzania)
Main characteristics of the Port of Dar es-Salaam
Gateway to Burundi, the DR Congo, Kenya, Malawi, Rwanda, Uganda, and Zambia
Syllabus of the Program - Ports of Central Africa
The main ports of Central Africa
Angola: Port of Luanda and Port of Lobito
Cameroon: Port of Douala
The Republic of the Congo: Port of Pointe Noire
Gabon: Port of Libreville and Port Gentil
Equatorial Guinea: ports of Malabo, Bata and Luba Freeport
Maritime Organization of West and Central Africa (MOWCA)
Objectives of the Program “Ports of Central Africa”:
To know the main ports of Central Africa
To analyze the main characteristics of the ports of Central Africa
Port of Lobito (Angola).
Introduction to the Port of Lobito
Main characteristics of the Port of Lobito
Access to Zimbabwe, Zambia and the DR Congo
Benguela railway
Port of Luanda (Angola).
Introduction to the Port of Luanda
Main characteristics of the Port of Luanda
Access to Zambia and the DR Congo
Autonomous Port of Douala (Cameroon).
Autonomous Port of Douala
Main characteristics of the Port of Douala
Access to Chad and the Central African Republic
Autonomous Port of Pointe Noire (the Republic of the Congo).
Introduction to the Port of Pointe Noire
Gateway for the Congo Basin: the Central African Republic, Chad, Cameroon, Gabon, Angola and the DR Congo
railway Congo-Ocean
Congo terminal
Ports of the Gabonese Republic
Introduction to the ports of the Gabonese Republic
Port Gentil
Port of Libreville
Port of Mayumba
Ports of Equatorial Guinea
Introduction to the ports of Equatorial Guinea
Port of Malabo
Port of Bata
Luba Freeport
Syllabus of the Program - Ports of West Africa
The main ports of West Africa
Ivory Coast: Port of Abidjan
Senegal: Port of Dakar
Togo: Port of Lomé
Benin: Port of Cotonou
Nigeria: Port of Lagos
Ghana: Port of Unit and Port of Takoradi
Objectives of the Program “Ports of West Africa”:
To know the main ports of West Africa
To analyze the main characteristics of the ports of West Africa
Autonomous Port of Cotonou (Benin)
Autonomous Port of Cotonou
Main characteristics of the Port of Cotonou
Access to Burkina Faso, Mali and Niger
Port of Abidjan (Ivory Coast)
Port of Abidjan
Main characteristics of the Port of Abidjan
Access to Mali, Burkina Faso and Niger
Port of Unit and Port of Takoradi (Ghana)
Port Authority of Ghana
Port of Topic
Port of Takoradi
Main characteristics of the ports
Gateway to the West African Markets
Ports of Nigeria
Port of Lagos
Port of Apapa
Port of the Port Harcourt
Port Complex of Calabar
Port Complex of Onne Port
Port Complex of Rivers Port
Port Complex of Can Island
Port Complex of Delta Port
Autonomous Port of Dakar
Autonomous Port of Dakar
Main characteristics of the Port of Dakar
Areas of the Port of Dakar
Access to the Malian market
Infrastructures in Senegal
Autonomous Port of Lomé
Autonomous Port of Lomé
Main characteristics of the Port of Lomé
Access to Burkina Faso, Mali and Niger
Togolese free zone
Syllabus of the Program - Ports of the Maghreb
Main ports of the Maghreb
Morocco:
Port of Casablanca
Ports of Mohammedia, Agadir, Tangier, Al-Hoceima..
Free zone of Tangier
Tunisia: ports of the Goulette, Rades, Bizerte, Sousse, Sfax
Algeria:
Ports of Algiers and Oran
Transport sector in Algeria
Objectives of the Program “Maghrebian ports”:
To know the main ports of the Maghreb
To analyze the main characteristics of Maghrebian ports
Ports of Algiers and Oran (Algeria).
Algerian Ports
Port of Algiers
Port of Oran
Transport sector in Algeria
Ports of Morocco
National Agency of the Moroccan Ports
Port of Casablanca
Other Moroccan ports: Mohammedia, Agadir, Tangier, Al Hoceima..
Free zone of Tangier
Ports of Tunisia
Introduction to the Tunisian ports
Ports of la Goulette, Rades, Bizerte, Sousse, Sfax, Gabes, Zarzis
Syllabus of the Program - African Transport Corridors.
Introduction to the African Transport Corridors
Almaty Action Program of the UN
Trans-African Roads network
Corridors in the region of the SADC
Cairo-Dakar Corridor (Trans-African highway)
Introduction to the Cairo-Dakar Corridor (Trans-African highway)
Main characteristics of the Cairo-Dakar Corridor
Access to seven markets of West and North Africa: Egypt, Libya, Tunisia, Algeria, Morocco, Mauritania, the Western Sahara, and Senegal
Alger-Lagos Corridor (Trans-Saharan highway)
Introduction to the Alger-Lagos Corridor (Trans-Saharan highway)
Main characteristics of the Alger-Lagos Corridor
Access to five markets of West of North Africa: Algeria, Niger, Nigeria, Mali, and Tunisia
Tripoli-Windhoek Corridor (Trans-African highway)
Introduction to the Tripoli-Windhoek Trans-African highway
Main characteristics of the Tripoli-Windhoek Corridor
Access to eight markets of Central, Southern and North Africa: Angola, Chad, Cameroon, the Central African Republic, the Republic of the Congo, the DR Congo, Namibia, and Libya
Gaborone-Cairo Trans-African Corridor.
Introduction to the Cairo-Gaborone Corridor
Main characteristics of the Cairo-Gaborone Trans-African highway
Access to five markets of Southern, Eastern and Northern Africa: Botswana, Egypt, Ethiopia, Kenya, South Africa, Sudan, Tanzania, Zambia, and Zimbabwe
Dakar-N'Djamena Trans-Sahelian Highway
Introduction to the Dakar-N'Djamena Trans-Sahelian Highway
Main characteristics of the Dakar-N'Djamena corridor
Access to seven markets of Central and Western Africa: Senegal, Mali, Burkina Faso, Niger, Nigeria, Cameroon, and Chad
N'Djamena-Djibouti Trans-African Highway
Introduction to the N'Djamena-Djibouti Trans-African Highway
Main characteristics of the Djibouti-N'Djamena corridor
Access to five markets of Eastern, Central and Western Africa: Sudan, Ethiopia, Nigeria, Djibouti, and Chad
Dakar-Lagos multimodal transport corridor
Introduction to the Dakar-Lagos corridor (Trans Coastal West African Highway)
Main characteristics of the Dakar-Lagos corridor
Access to twelve markets of West Africa and the Maghreb: Mauritania, Senegal, the Gambia, Guinea-Bissau, Guinea, Sierra Leone, Liberia, Ivory Coast, Ghana, Togo, Benin, and Nigeria
Lagos-Mombasa African transport corridor
Introduction to the Lagos-Mombasa Trans-African Corridor (Trans-African highway 8)
Main characteristics of the Mombasa-Lagos corridor
Access to six Markets of Eastern, Central and Western Africa: Nigeria, Cameroon, the Central African Republic, the DR Congo, Uganda, and Kenya
Beira-Lobito transport corridor (Angola).
Introduction to the Beira-Lobito Corridor (Trans-African highway 9)
Main characteristics of the Beira-Lobito highway
Access to five markets of Central, Eastern and Southern Africa: Angola, the DR Congo, Mozambique, Zambia, and Zimbabwe
Northern Corridor.
Introduction to the Northern Corridor (East Africa): Uganda, Rwanda, Burundi, Kenya
Transport network of the Northern Corridor
Institutional framework
Lobito Corridor.
Introduction to the project of the Lobito Corridor
Port of Lobito
Railway of Benguela
Lobito Oil refinery
Central Corridor
Introduction to the Central Corridor (Burundi, the Republic of the Congo, Rwanda, Tanzania, and Uganda)
Main characteristics of the Central Corridor
Access to five Eastern and Central African Markets: Burundi, the DR Congo, Rwanda, Tanzania, and Uganda
North-South Corridor
Introduction to the North-South Corridor
Main characteristics of the North-South Corridor
A project of the Tripartite Free Trade Agreement (COMESA-SADC-EAC)
Access to eight Eastern and Southern African Markets: Botswana, the DR Congo, Malawi, Mozambique, South Africa, Tanzania, Zambia, and Zimbabwe
Syllabus of the Program - Road Infrastructure Costs in Africa.
Introduction to the costs of highways infrastructures in Africa
Building a Database for the Analysis of the Road Costs in Africa
Analytical Approach for the African Road Infrastructure Costs
Unit Cost Curve by Project Size
Syllabus of the Program - African Transport and Regional Integration.
CECT = Credit of Capitalisable and Transferable Evaluation (CAMES)
Samples: the transport corridors and the African ports (Bachelor of Science in Inter-African Business, e-learning, second semester).
Language of the subject “International Transport and Logistics” of the Bachelor of Science in Inter-African Business taught by EENI Global Business School (second semester): or
EENIEENIEENI.
(c) EENI Global Business School (1995-2024)
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