By: Contributor
The blue economy is not an ecological luxury: it is a strategic necessity. Sustainable aquaculture, offshore renewable energies, port industries, marine biotechnologies, responsible coastal tourism.
All these sectors have a promising future provided they are structured, interconnected, designed as value chains, and backed up by substantial investment and appropriate standards.
That is the very essence of the National Strategy wanted and deployed by Morocco as a real engine for growth, social inclusion and human development.
To this end, the Kingdom of Morocco started implementing several large-scale projects, which have reshaped the country’s port landscape, in particular, like the large Tanger Med container port and the future ports of Nador West-Med and Dakhla Atlantic, both of which will build on an impressive logistics and industrial ecosystem.
NEXT, STRONGER SOUTH-SOUTH COOPERATION AND REGIONAL INTEGRATION AROUND OCEAN SPACES
A joint effort is needed because the challenge is not just national; it is continental. It is not enough to share an ocean.
We need to think about it together, manage it together, defend it together. Only a concerted African approach can optimize maritime value chains, secure trade routes and capture a more equitable share of the world’s ocean wealth.
This is why Africa should be fully engaged in the protection of marine biodiversity, genetic resources and marine protected areas.
Our continent must have maritime safety mechanisms adapted to its needs and must, from now on, speak with one voice on the global ocean scene.
FINALLY, MARITIME EFFECTIVENESS THROUGH ATLANTIC SYNERGIES.
Geopolitical dynamics in Africa must not suffer from the inertia of geography, nor from the burdens of the past.
Africa’s Atlantic seaboard has long been a particularly neglected space, notwithstanding its infinite potential in terms of opening up the continent, and promoting trade as well as Africa’s positioning on the global scene.
With that in mind, I launched the Atlantic African States Initiative, which aims to turn this coastline into a platform for strategic dialogue, collective security, mobility and economic integration, using a new form of governance that is collegial, rallying and pragmatic.
My vision of an Atlantic Africa that makes the most of this ocean involves not just the coastal countries, but also the sister countries of the Sahel, to which we should offer a structured, reliable maritime outlet.
It is also in the same spirit of solidarity and shared prosperity that I initiated the African Atlantic Gas Pipeline project as an energy interconnection corridor and a lever for new geo-economic opportunities in West Africa.